FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a method for selecting antimicrobial agent and utilization
thereof. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method for antimicrobial
treatment, comprising analyzing the microbial biota of the objective system based
on base sequence of DNA, selecting an industrial antimicrobial agent (in the following
sometimes simply called antimicrobial agent) optimum for this biota from a data base
and applying it, as well as to a method for monitoring the effect of the antimicrobial
treatment. Further, the present invention relates to a method for inhibiting slime
formation in paper manufacturing process for attaining slime control in the white
water circulation system, comprising, identifying the kind and the origin of occurrence
of each microbe that exhibits resistance against the slime control agent(s) presently
on use and adding other slime control agent(s), to which the identified microbe(s)
are susceptible, also to the identified origin of occurrence of the microbe(s), in
order to render the slime control effect in the white water circulation system more
stable or to attain inhibition of slime formation in the paper manufacturing process
course using smaller amount of controlling reagent. Further, the present invention
relates also to a method for analyzing cling substances formed on products of paper
manufacturing, in which the microbial biota of microbes that form the cling substanses,
such as defects and spots, on the product or the dominant microbe therein is identified
by making use of base sequence of DNA as a parameter, to a method for inspecting the
cause of formation of the cling substanses and the location of origin of occurrence
of the microbes from the result of such analysis and to a method for controlling occurrence
of microbes to enable reduction of occurrence of cling substanses by having resort
to the inspected cause of the cling substance formation.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] It is well recognized that the kinds of microbes appearing in an objective system,
to which industrial antimicrobial agents, such as slime control agents and preservatives,
are to be applied, are distributed over a very wide range, since such objective system
is found in regions very wide not only in view of the microbiological substrate condition
but also in view of the environmental condition. For instance, the white water system
in paper manufacturing process is operated with white water delivered from a paper
machine, which may have varying pH condition ranging from acidic to weakly alkaline
pH value and varying temperature condition ranging from about 15 °C in winter season
to about 50 °C upon heating. Objective systems to be treated with preservative may
be in varying pH condition ranging from acidic to alkaline values together with widely
varying temperature conditions ranging from 20 to 70 °C.
[0003] Thus, the environmental conditions in the objective system to which the antimicrobial
agent is applied are different for each specific system over a wide range and, therefore,
the kinds of microbes appearing therein may also be different for each specific system.
For selecting the antimicrobial agent to be applied to each specific objective system,
it is necessary to select those which are adapted to the microbes and their populations
present in the objective system (biota) and are adapted also to the environmental
condition therein, since the environmental condition of the objective system has influence
also on the effect of antimicrobial agent. If faulty selection of antimicrobial agent
is made, not only the expected antimicrobial effect cannot be attained but also useless
outflow of considerable amount of antimicrobial agent over natural environment accompanies
which may occasionally lead to unexpected destruction of environment.
[0004] For dealing with such widely ranging objective systems (application fields), a contrivance
for enabling selection of optimum antimicrobial agent for each specific objective
system in practice has been proposed, in which a variety of antimicrobial agents exhibiting
different properties are provided for use. On growing variety of antimicrobial agents
to be provided, however, it has become important to bring about a technique for selecting
antimicrobial agents which are most adapted to each specific different condition.
[0005] Heretofore, it has, in many cases for applying an antimicrobial agent to an objective
system, been practised to determine the antimicrobial agent to be used, in such a
manner that a sample of microbes is collected from the objective system, whereupon
comparison of effect of antimicrobial agent on the microbes is made for antimicrobial
agents of as many sorts as possible, by performing, for example, bactericidal experiments,
growth inhibiting experiments and bacteria count determination, after the sample has
been carried back to the laboratory, and the determination of the antibacterial agent
to be used is realized based on the results obtained thereby.
[0006] However, it is impossible to carry out the experiments for all the existing antimicrobial
agents by the above-mentioned prior technique within a brief period in the point of
view of limitation of manpower and time. Thus, there was a problem that the selection
of antimicrobial agent had to be realized usually based on the results obtained by
experiments carried out with a limited number of antimicrobial agents at limited experimantal
concentrations.
[0007] Moreover, the prior technique involves a problem that the antimicrobial agents are
selected based on the experimantal results for only the microbes which are culturable.
Thus, it has been recognized that many microbes which are not able to be cultured
isolatedly, namely, so-called non-culturable microbes, are present in the objective
system to which antimicrobial agents are applied. In an objective system in which
such a microbe not isolatedly culturable constitutes the dominant species, an antimicrobial
agent selected based on the result of experiment involving the operation of culture
should not always represent the optimum antimicrobial agent.
[0008] As given above, it was the actual matter of fact that the prior technique suffers
from a problem that the microbial biota in the objective system may not be made clear
by the prior technique and, thus, it is not always clear whether optimum antimicrobial
agent has been selected or not, so that selection of antimicrobial agent and application
thereof had to be decided by relying largely on experiences.
[0009] As to the technique for analyzing microbial biota, there has been practised a classical
method of identification in which the microbes are classified based on the morphological/physiological
characteristic features, wherein correct results may only difficultly be obtained
by a professional skilled in the practice of identification of microbes and, in addition,
a long period of time of about one month or more is required for attaining a microbial
biota analysis of one single objective system even by a full attendant work by a skilled
professional, precluding general application thereof except for a special research
purpose. Therefore, it is practically impossible to apply the classical method of
identification of microbial biota for routine work of selection of antimicrobial agent.
[0010] On the other hand, prompt identifying kits have been brought to the market, which
are capable of identifying microbes of a microbial biota within a short term of 7
to 15 days. These identifying kits were, however, developed mainly for a purpose of
medical use and, thus, may suffer from a problem that a correct identification of
microbes is only dificultly attained, when the kit is used for an objective system
to which industrial antimicrobial agent is to be applied. Further, these kits may
suffer from a problem that they are applicable only to culturable microbes and erroneous
judgements may be derived when used for an objective system in which the dominant
microbe can not be cultured isolatedly in a culture medium.
[0011] As described above, it is necessary for performing antimicrobial treatment to select
an antimicrobial agent suitable for correctly grasping the microbial biota in the
objective system within a short period of time and adapted to the microbial biota
and environmental condition of the objective system.
[0012] As for the techniques for analyzing microbial biota, methods have recently been developed,
in which differences in the base sequence of a DNA encoding ribosomal RNA (in the
following referred to as rRNA) of microbe, which is referred to hereinafter as rDNA,
are utilized, whereby it is now made possible to clearly identify within a brief time
microbial biota including non-culturable bacteria not capable of forming colony. However,
there has hitherto been known no technical measure of selecting an antimicrobial agent
which is at the most adapted to each specific objective system, by combining the information
as to the microbial biota . identified in the manner as above with a plurality of
informations including the efficacy of antimicrobial agent to be used, the nutritive
condition of the objective system and the environmental condition.
[0013] By the way, a phenomenon has been known, that the antimicrobial effect of an antimicrobial
agent may suddenly be changed when one and the same antimicrobial agent is used for
a prolonged period of time, due to, for example, a minute variation in the environmental
condition or acquirement of a reagent-resistance by a microbe. For this reason, it
is necessary to watch periodically whether the antimicrobial agent used does reveal
successively its effect as expected or not. For this purpose, there has been practised
heretofore to watch the state of staining inside the objective system directly after
the shutdown or to perform viable count determination of the objective system by agar
plate method to judge the effect.
[0014] By the above watching method of prior art, however, it is not able to make clear
whether the cause of change in the effect of the antimicrobial agent is due to appearance
of a reagent-resistant microbe or due to a simple shortage of amount of the reagent.
For this reason, an alternative technique for watching the effect of industrial antimicrobial
agent permitting to monitor variation of microbial biota after the application of
the antimicrobial agent is required.
[0015] In the case where trouble still occurred in spite of use of antimicrobial agent or
where a sudden decrease of the effect of antimicrobial agent occurred during a prolonged
successive use of one and the same antimicrobial agent, it is required to take necessary
step at once to resolve the problem by making clear the cause therefor. In the past,
however, there was no technical measure to detect the cause of occurrence of the trouble
promptly and assuaredly, except to have resort to a contrivance of responding measure
by trial and error.
[0016] For such cases as above also, a technical measure for deciding a scientific way of
detecting the cause and an adaptive way of treatment permitting to respond even to
such urgent cases is requested.
[0017] Paper manufacturing process in paper factory comprises dispersing pulp in water to
form a suspension, preparing the suspension at a desired fiber size and desired pulp
concentration and, then, subjecting the suspension to papermaking after addition of
papermaking reagents. The paper manufaturing arrangement is constituted of a pulp
raw material preparation system, a paper broke system, a papermaking reagent preparation
system, a stock preparation system, a white water circulation system, a white water
recovering system and so on. The aqueous liquor separated from the paper machine is
called white water which is reused for dispersing pulp to form a suspension, for adjusting
the concentration of suspension and for others. White water contains starch and other
organic materials added as papermaking chemicals and is maintained usually at a temperature
of 30 - 40 °C and, thus, is held under a condition preferable for growth of microbes,
so that it contains usually microbes at a population of about 10
5 - 10
7 per milliliter when no slime control measures are taken.
[0018] These microbes proliferate while being held attached on submerged solid walls in
white water circulation system of paper machine and may form cling substance called
a slime thereon together with non-biological solid matters in white water taken up
therein. When such a slime is detached during the operation of paper machine, the
paper product will be stained by "spot" or "fish eye", bringing about various troubles,
such as deterioration of product quality and even break down of paper.
[0019] A means for inhibiting slime formation has now widely been incorporated by adding
slime control agent to the white water circulation system, in order to prevent slime
troubles, wherefor various slime control agents have been found in the market.
[0020] Microbes found in paper manufacturing process courses are brought thereinto from
various origins, such as the raw pulp, various papermaking chemicals, industrial water
and atmospheric air, and grow and proliferate in various paper manufacturing process
courses to form each a microbial biota adapted to each environmental condition. Since
these microbes flow along the flow course of paper manufacturing process and will
gather in the papermaking raw stock, the white water system contains microbes proliferated
in all the paper manufacturing process cources. Among these microbes, those which
are adapted to the environmental condition of the white water system and adherent
easily onto solid walls to grow and proliferate thereon will constitute main constituent
microbes of slime.
[0021] From these circumstances, it has been presumed that the microbial biota in the white
water system may be complicated, so that slime control agents having wide antimicrobial
spectra are apt to be preferred to use. However, slime control agents having wide
antimicrobial spectra and higher activities may on the other hand exhibit higher toxicities
or higher dangerousnesses in handling, so that there may scarcely be able to get a
slime control agent having ideal performances and, hence, use of a plurality of slime
control agents in combination has found wide applications.
[0022] If the microbial biota in the white water system or in a slime can be analyzed easily
and if the site of origin of occurrence of each microbe, namely, where each microbe
has mainly proliferated, can be determined, inhibition of slime formation will become
possible by a suitable contrivance of a rational way of application of antimicrobial
agent, even if the antimicrobial spectrum thereof is not ideally wide. Thus, it has
to be assumed that a stable slime control effect can be attained, when a slime control
agent effective for the dominant microbe in the white. water system is added to the
white water system and a further slime control agent effective for a microbe exhibiting
resistance against the aforementioned antimicrobial agent is added to the site of
origin of occurrence of such microbe.
[0023] Such an idea has been proposed hitherto and a method has been attempted, in which
a slime control agent is added also to the site at which proliferation of microbes
is particularly intensive, such as the broke chest. In this prior method, the manner
of determination of the site of origin of occurrence of microbes consists in a practice
of collecting a sample from each process course of paper manufacture and performing
viable count determination by, for example, agar plate method, wherein the site where
the viable count is higher is determined as the site of origin of occurrence of microbes.
[0024] In the above prior method, it is not able to judge whether the existing microbes
contain a proliferated microbe resistant against the slime control agent (white water
treating agent) presently on use or are all susceptible thereto, since the prior art
viable count measurement does not permit identification of each kind of microbe. Therefore,
it has been necessary to select the slime control agent to be added to the site of
origin of occurrence of microbes (origin treating agent) by collecting a sample again
from each of the sites where the viable counts were higher and performing antimicrobial
experiments using various slime control agents.
[0025] If a microbe resistant against the white water treating agent constitutes the dominant
microbe species in the microbial biota in the origin of occurrence in which microbes
grow, the above prior art method may permit to attain selection of pertinent origin
treating agent so long as the bothersome operation can be endured. However, when the
circumstances are such that the dominant microbe is susceptible to the white water
treating agent but a kind of microbe resistant to the treating agent also grows concurrently,
the prior art method may difficultly permit to determine pertinent origin treating
agent or even be impossible to determine.
[0026] In the process courses of paper manufacturing, reuse of white water has progressed
and has reached the state that it is repeatedly used in circulation in every process
course in order to spare consumption of water. In a paper manufacturing factory where
reuse of white water has progressed, the viable count in various process liquors becomes
not different from that in the white water, so that determination of site of origin
of microbe occurrence has become impossible by viable count determination. On the
other hand, occurrence of slime troubles is enhanced in general in systems where reuse
of white water has progressed, a more rational method for inhibiting slime formation
is highly requested.
[0027] On the other hand, the most important problem in the quality control in a paper manufacturing
factory comprising the above-mentioned paper manufacturing process courses resides
in that any kind of alien substance adheres onto the paper upon papermaking and causes
occurrence of defective portion called a "defect" (also called "hole", "spot" or "fish
eye") on the product. Such defect will not only deteriorate the product quality considerably
but also cause various troubles upon printing on the paper. In addition, such a defect
may cause break down of paper, rendering operation of paper machine difficult and
decreasing the productivity considerably.
[0028] It has been known that the substance causing the defect includes a slime (constituted
of microbes and mucous substances produced therefrom), pitch, scale, sizing agent,
contaminant inclusion and composite complex of them. In papermaking process course
in paper manufacturing, formation of slime originated from microbes has attracted
great attention, since this process course is held under a condition favorable for
the growth of microbes, so that a slime control treatment is incorporated in general
for inhibiting formation thereof.
[0029] Whether the defect formed on the product is derived from microbial slime or not can
be judged by, for example, observation under a microscope or chemical analysis, such
as ninhydrin reaction. If it is judged that the defect is derived from microbial slime,
the manner of slime control treatment must be improved to prevent occurence of defect.
[0030] However, it may be difficult to identify each microbe by separating and culturing
the microbe from the defective portion of paper product and to determine the existence
proportion of microbes therein, namely, the microbial biota, and the kind of the dominant
microbe, since paper product has been subjected to high temperature drying. Therefore,
it is impossible to identify what kind of microbe causes the defect (in the following,
sometimes referred to as causal microbe) and which one among the paper machine, water
systems and raw material system has to be judged as the origin of occurrence of the
causal microbe.
[0031] In the past, an example has been reported in which a part of microbes forming stout
spores was separated from paper (Vaisanen et al; Journal of Appl. Bacteriology,
71, pp 130 - 133, 1991), in which also identification of causal microbe for the defect
and determination of the original site of occurrence of such causal microbe are prohibited,
since almost all the microbes are extinct.
[0032] Therefore, it has been impossible to realize a scientific and rational response,
such as identification of causal microbe and determination of original site of occurrence
thereof with subsequent microbe control treatment by a method which is at the most
adapted to the microbe. In these circumstances, the counter measure presently used
has been only based on a "symptomatic treatment", such as increasing the amount of
the slime control agent at the paper machine by an empirical and circumstance-responded
judgement or anticeptically treating a site where viable count is relatively high,
such as chests or the like, so that a reliable reduction of occurrence of defect caused
by microbes may difficultly be attained.
[0033] An object of the present invention is to propose a method for selecting antimicrobial
agent and utilization thereof, which method can afford to attain the selection simply
and reliably within a brief time by analyzing the microbial biota of a sample based
on base sequence of DNA and selecting an industrial antimicrobial agent adapted at
the most for the microbial biota by making use of a data base.
[0034] Another object of the present invention is to propose a process for effecting antimicrobial
treatment, which can attain the treatment efficiently by selecting an optimum industrial
antimicrobial agent within a brief time in accordance with the microbial biota of
the objective system.
[0035] A still another object of the present invention is to propose a method for monitoring
the antimicrobial treatment effect, which enables to judge simply within a brief time
in an assured manner whether or not the action of the antimicrobial agent is revealed.
[0036] A further object of the present invention is to make a method for inhibiting slime
formation rational and to make the effect of inhibition of slime formation in the
white water circulation system stable, by identifying the kind of each microbe which
is resistant against the white water treating agent and the site of origin of occurrence
of such microbe by analysis of the microbial biota based on base sequence of DNA of
each microbe and by existence proportion thereof, as distinguished from the prior
practice by viable count measurement, and adding an origin treating agent selected
from a data base, in which reagent data to be searched has been stored preliminarily,
to the site of origin of occurrence of the microbe identified as above. The object
is also directed to reduction of total amount of the slime control agent to be used,
by selecting a slime control agent effective for the dominant microbe in the white
water circualtion system (where the flow rate is at the highest and, thus, greater
amount of slime control agent is required) to use as the white water treating agent
and, on the other hand, identifying the site of origin of occurrence of a microbe
which is resistant against the control agent and adding another slime control agent
effective for this resistant microbe selected as the origin treating agent only to
the so-identified site of origin.
[0037] A still further object of the present invention is to propose a method for analyzing
cling substances formed on products of manufacture in paper manufacturing process,
which permits identification of the microbe that caused the defect of paper products
in a simple and reliable manner.
[0038] A still further object of the present invention is to propose a method for inspecting
the causal basis of occurrence of cling substance on products of manufacture in paper
manufacturing process, which permits determination of site of origin of occurrence
of the microbe that caused the defect on paper products in a simple and reliable manner.
[0039] A still further object of the present invention is to propose a method for controlling
microbes in paper manufacturing process, which permits determination of the site of
origin of occurrence of the microbe that caused the defect on paper products in a
simple and reliable manner, whereby reduction of occurrence of defect on paper products
can be attained in a simple and reliable manner.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0040]
Fig. 1 is a flow diagram of the apparatus for paper manufacturing, to which the process
for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention is to be
applied, shown in one mode of implementation of the invention.
Fig. 2 is a flow diagram showing an embodiment of the method for analyzing microbial
biota in the process for effecting antimicrobial treatment and the method for selecting
the antimicrobial agent according to the present invention, shown in one mode of implementation
of the invention.
Fig. 3 is a flow diagram of a paper manufacturing apparatus to which the method for
slime control according to the present invention is to be applied, shown in one mode
of implementation of the invention.
Fig. 4 is a diagram showing the result of electrophoresis experiment performed in
Example 10.
Fig. 5 gives graphs each showing the fragment patterns of DNA analyzed in Example
11 obtained by TRFLP method. In all the graphs, ordinate refers to fluorescence intencity
and abscissa refers to the length of TRF (Terminal Restriction Fragment) in bases.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
[0041] The microbial biota of the objective system to which an antimicrobial agent is to
be applied cannot be analyzed by conventional classical method for identifying the
microbes and, therefore, selection of an antimicrobial agent in accordance with each
specific microbial biota in the objective system has, in fact, not been possible.
In these circumstances, the present inventors had paid their special attention to
the fact that analysis of microbial biota by making use of base sequence of DNA can
be realized within a brief time together with an advantage of permission of analysis
of even a microbe that cannot be isolated by culture in culture medium. Based on such
idea, the inventors reached completion of a process for effecting antimicrobial treatment
which permits to select an adaptive antimicrobial agent in accordance with each specific
microbial biota, by combining such idea organically with the results of experiments
performed for various microbes and with the practical data of experiences of treatment
performed on various objective systems using antimicrobial agents. Further, the inventors
have completed a method in which the effect of antimicrobial treatment is monitored
by watching variation in the microbial biota in an objective system after application
of antimicrobial agent to the system, whereupon the antimicrobial agent used is changed,
if necessary, to other one.
[0042] Furthermore, the present inventors recognized that the analysis of microbial biota
by making use of base sequence of DNA is far superior as compared with the conventional
classical technique in the points of accuracy and promptness and is effective for
comparing microbial biotas and for determining the site of origin of occurrence of
microbe in paper manufacturing process courses, which has, with further sound researches,
led to the completion of the present invention.
[0043] Moreover, the present inventors recognized that it is possible to attain analysis
of the kinds of microbes constituting cling substances on paper products, their names,
constitutional proportion, dominant microbe and so on, by extracting from defective
portion on the paper product each DNA originated from each microbe and utilizing the
genetic informations of the DNA, wherefrom the present invention has been completed.
[0044] Thus, the present invention resides in the method for selecting an antimicrobial
agent and in the utilization thereof as given below:
(1) A method for selecting antimicrobial agent, comprising
a microbe analyzing step in which microbes in the microbial biota of a sample are
analyzed based on base sequence of DNA and
an antimicrobial agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base
storing data for industrial antimicrobial agents applicable to the analyzed microbes
recited at effective concentrations, picking up industrial antimicrobial agents effective
for the microbial biota, dominant microbe or specific microbe(s) in the sample analyzed
in the above microbe analyzing step and selecting among the picked up ones an industrial
antimicrobial agent.
(2) A process for effecting antimicrobial treatment using one or more industrial antimicrobial
agents, comprising
a sampling step in which a sample that contains microbes is collected from the objective
system to which the industrial antimicrobial agent(s) is (are) to be applied,
a microbe analyzing step in which microbes in the microbial biota of the sample are
analyzed based on base sequence of DNA,
an antimicrobial agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base
storing data for industrial antimicrobial agents applicable to the analyzed microbes
recited at effective concentrations, picking up industrial antimicrobial agents effective
for the microbial biota, dominant microbe or specific microbe(s) in the sample analyzed
in the above microbe analyzing step and selecting among the picked up ones one or
more industrial antimicrobial agents and
an antimicrobial agent adding step in which the industrial antimicrobial agent selected
in the above antimicrobial agent selecting step is added to the objective system.
(3) A method for monitoring antimicrobial treatment effect in a system for realizing
an antimicrobial treatment, which system comprises
a sampling step in which a sample that contains microbes is collected from the objective
system to which one or more industrial antimicrobial agents are to be applied,
a microbe analyzing step in which microbes in the microbial biota of the sample are
analyzed based on base sequence of DNA,
an antimicrobial agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base
storing data for industrial antimicrobial agents applicable to the analyzed microbes
recited at effective concentrations, picking up industrial antimicrobial agents effective
for the microbial biota, dominant microbe or specific microbe(s) in the sample analyzed
in the above microbe analyzing step and selecting among the picked up ones an industrial
antimicrobial agent and
an antimicrobial agent adding step in which the industrial antimicrobial agent selected
in the above antimicrobial agent selecting step is added to the objective system,
the said method comprising
performing periodically or at a voluntary occasion the sampling step and the microbe
analyzing step mentioned above and
comparing the result of this microbe analysis with the result of the preceding microbe
analysis, to watch any variation in the effect of the industrial antimicrobial agent
by the variation in microbial biota.
(4) A method for inhibiting slime formation in paper manufacturing process courses,
by using one or more slime control agents, which method comprises
a sampling step in which samples are collected at least two locations in the paper
manufacturing process courses held under a slime formation inhibiting treatment using
the slime control agent(s),
a microbe analyzing step in which microbes in the microbial biota of each sample are
analyzed based on base sequence of DNA,
a slime control agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base storing
data for industrial antimicrobial agents applicable to the analyzed microbes recited
at effective concentrations, picking up slime control agents effective for the microbial
biota, dominant microbe or specific microbe(s) in the sample analyzed in the above
microbe analyzing step and selecting among the picked up ones a slime control agent
and
a slime control agent adding step in which the slime control agent selected in the
above slime control agent selecting step is added to the objective system,
the said method further comprising
a resistance discriminating step in which discrimination is effected as to whether
or not the microbe detected in the above microbe analyzing step is resistant against
the slime control agent presently on use and
an origin determining step in which a sampling location at which the microbe that
is discriminated in the above resistance discriminating step as resistant against
the slime control agent is found at higher proportion is determined as the site of
origin of occurrence of the resistant microbe,
wherein one or more slime control agents are picked up in the above slime control
agent selecting step by search in the data base using, as the search key, the microbe
that is discriminated in the above resistance discriminating step as resistant against
the slime control agent presently on use.
(5) A method for inhibiting slime formation which causes cling substances on paper
products in paper manufacturing process courses, by using one or more slime control
agents, which method comprises
a sampling step in which samples are collected from the cling substances on the paper
products and from the slimes formed in the paper manufacturing process courses,
a microbe analyzing step in which microbes in the microbial biota of each sample are
analyzed based on base sequence of DNA,
a slime control agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base storing
data for industrial antimicrobial agents applicable to the analyzed microbes recited
at effective concentrations, picking up slime control agents effective for the microbial
biota, dominant microbe or specific microbe(s) in the sample analyzed in the above
microbe analyzing step and selecting among the picked up ones a slime control agent
and
a slime control agent adding step in which the slime control agent selected in the
above slime control agent selecting step is added to the objective system,
the said method further comprising
a slime origin determining step in which the microbial biota or the dominant microbe
in the cling substance is compared with the microbial biota or the dominant microbe
in the slimes found in the paper manufacturing process courses, in order to determine
the site of origin of occurrence of the slime that caused the cling substance,
wherein one or more slime control agents are picked up in the above slime control
agent selecting step by search in the data base using, as the search key, the dominant
microbe of the slime that caused the cling substance and
wherein the slime control agent is added in the slime control agent adding step
to the objective system at the site determined in the slime origin determining step.
(6) A method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment using one or more industrial
antimicrobial agents, comprising
collecting a sample that contains microbes from the objective system to which the
industrial antimicrobial agent(s) is (are) applied,
analyzing the microbes in the microbial biota of this sample based on base sequence
of DNA and
performing search in a data base that stores data for industrial antimicrobial agents
recited at effective concentrations for microbes to pick up industrial antimicrobial
agents found inputted in said data base for their data as to effective concentrations
for the microbial biota, dominant microbe or specific microbe(s) of said sample and
selecting among the picked up ones one or more industrial antimicrobial agents to
be used.
(7) A method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment using one or more industrial
antimicrobial agents, comprising
collecting periodically or at a voluntary occasion a sample that contains microbes
from the objective system held under antimicrobial treatment using one or more industrial
antimicrobial agents,
analyzing the microbes in the microbial biota of this sample based on base sequence
of DNA and
watching any variation in the effect of the industrial antimicrobial agent(s) by variation
in the microbial biota detected by comparing the result of the above analysis with
the result of the preceding analysis, wherein in the case where any tendency to occurrence
of a microbe which is resistant against the industrial antimicrobial agent(s) is recognized,
search in a data base storing data of effective concentrations of industrial antimicrobial
agents for microbes is performed to pick up industrial antimicrobial agents which
are effective for the microbe that is recognized for its tendency to occurrence and
for that the data of effective concentrations for said microbe are inputted therein
and
selecting among the picked up ones one or more industrial- antimicrobial agents to
be used.
(8) The method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment as defined in the above (6)
or (7), wherein the data of effective concentrations of industrial antimicrobial agents
stored in the data base are those obtained from culture experiment for each individual
microbe, from experiences of practical treatments or from existing literatures.
(9) The method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment as defined in any one of the
above (6) to (8), wherein the data base stores data for the effective concentrations
of industrial antimicrobial agents for microbes recited under each environmental condition
that has influence on the growth of the microbes and wherein industrial antimicrobial
agents are picked up among those recited under designated environmental conditions.
(10) The method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment as defined in the above (9),
wherein, for the environmental condition that has influence on the growth of the microbes,
pH, temperature and each specific objective system are assigned.
(11) The method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment as defined in any one of
the above (6) to (10), wherein the data base permits addition, accumulation and revision
of data as to the kind of microbe, sort and effective concentration of the industrial
antimicrobial agent, the environmental condition that has influence on the growth
of microbe and the result of experiences of practical treatment.
(12) The method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment as defined in any one of
the above (6) to (11), wherein the data base permits addition, accumulation and revision
of data in such a manner that it operates, when the concentration of the industrial
antimicrobial agent used in the objective system, results of analyses of the microbial
biota before and after the treatment with industrial antimicrobial agent and the result
of experiences of practical treatment are inputted, to calculate the difference in
the amount of each kind of microbe in the microbial biota before and after the application
of the industrial antimicrobial agent(s) and to record it, whereupon the data base
judges, based on the result of calculation, whether or not the concentration of the
industrial antimicrobial agent applied was effective for each of the microbes present.
(13) The method for attaining an antimicrobial treatment as defined in any one of
the above (6) to (12), wherein the data base permits addition, accumulation and revision
of data in such a manner that it operates, when the concentration of the industrial
antimicrobial agent used in the objective system, results of analyses of the microbial
biota before and after the treatment with industrial antimicrobial agent and the result
of experiences of practical treatment are inputted, to calculate the difference in
the amount of each kind of microbe in the microbial biota before and after the application
of the industrial antimicrobial agent(s), whereupon the data base judges, based on
the result of calculation, whether or not the concentration of the industrial antimicrobial
agent applied was effective for each of the microbes present, before the result of
judgement obtained from the experiences of practical treatment and the result of judgement
obtained from the culture experiment carried out for a culturable microbe included
in the objective system are compared with each other to judge that the effect of the
industrial antimicrobial agent in the practical treatment is higher or within the
proper range or lower as comparted with the effect in the culture experiment.
(14) A method for monitoring antimicrobial effect comprising
collecting a sample that contains microbes periodically or at a voluntary occasion
from the objective system to which one or more industrial antimicrobial agents were
applied,
analyzing the microbial biota of this sample based on base sequence of DNA and
comparing the result of the analysis with the result of the preceding analysis to
watch any variation in the effect of the industrial antimicrobial agent by the variation
in the microbial biota.
(15) A method for monitoring antimicrobial effect comprising
collecting a sample that contains microbes periodically or at a voluntary occasion
from the objective system to which one or more industrial antimicrobial agents were
applied,
analyzing the microbial biota of this sample based on base sequence of DNA and
comparing the result of the analysis with the result of the preceding analysis to
watch any variation in the effect of the industrial antimicrobial agent by the variation
in the microbial biota, wherein in the case where any tendency to occurrence of a
microbe which is resistant against the industrial antimicrobial agent(s) is recognized,
judgement for re-selection of industrial antimicrobial agent is made.
(16) A method for inhibiting slime formation in paper manufacturing process courses
using one or more slime control agents, comprising
a microbe analyzing step in which samples are collected at least two locations in
the paper manufacturing process courses held under a slime formation inhibiting treatment
using the slime control agent(s) and the microbial biota of each sample. is analyzed
based on base sequence of DNA,
a resistance discriminating step in which discrimination is made as to whether or
not the microbe detected in the above microbe analyzing step is resistant against
the slime control agent presently on use,
an origin determining step in which a sampling location at which the microbe that
is discriminated in the above resistance discriminating step as being resistant against
the slime control agent is found at higher proportion is determined as the site of
origin of occurrence of the resistant microbe,
a slime control agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base storing
data for slime control agents for microbes recited at effective concentrations, using,
as the search key, the microbe which is discriminated in the above resistance discriminating
step as being resistant, picking up those slime control agents, of which effective
concentrations for the resistant microbes are found inputted, and selecting among
the picked up ones a new slime control agent and
an origin treating agent adding step in which the new slime control agent selected
in the above slime control agent selecting step is added to the site of origin of
occurrence of the resistant microbe determined in the above origin determining step.
(17) A method for inhibiting slime formation in paper manufacturing process courses
using one or more slime control agents, comprising
a microbe analyzing step in which samples are collected at least two locations in
the paper manufacturing process courses held under a slime formation inhibiting treatment
using the slime control agent(s) and microbes in each sample are analyzed based on
base sequence of DNA,
a resistance discriminating step in which discrimination is made as to whether or
not the microbe detected in the above microbe analyzing step is resistant against
the slime control agent presently on use,
an origin determining step in which proportion of existence of the resistant microbe
discriminated in the above resistance discriminating step as being resistant is determined
for each sample and the sampling location at which the resistant microbe is found
at higher proportion is determined as the site of origin of occurrence of the resistant
microbe,
a slime control agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base storing
data for slime control agents for microbes recited at effective concentrations, using,
as the search key, the microbe which is discriminated in the above resistance discriminating
step as being resistant, picking up those slime control agents, of which effective
concentrations for the resistant microbes are found inputted, and selecting among
the picked up ones a new slime control agent and
an origin treating agent adding step in which the new slime control agent selected
in the above slime control agent selecting step is added to the site of origin of
occurrence of the resistant microbe determined in the above origin determining step.
(18) A method for inhibiting slime formation in paper manufacturing process courses
using one or more slime control agents, comprising
a microbe analyzing step in which samples are collected at least two locations in
the paper manufacturing process courses held under a slime formation inhibiting treatment
using the slime control agent(s) and the microbial biota for each sample is analyzed
based on base sequence of DNA,
a resistance discriminating step in which discrimination is made as to whether or
not the microbe detected in the above microbe analyzing step is resistant against
the slime control agent presently on use,
a slime control agent selecting step, in which a data base storing data for slime
control agents for microbes recited at effective concentrations is searched using,
as the search key, the microbe which is discriminated in the above resistance discriminating
step as being resistant and those slime control agents, of which effective concentrations
for the resistant microbes are found inputted, are picked up, among which a new slime
control agent is selected, and
an origin treating agent adding step in which the new slime control agent selected
in the above slime control agent selecting step is added to the location where the
sample that contains the microbe discriminated in the above resistance discriminating
step as being resistant at higher proportion was collected.
(19) The method for inhibiting slime formation as defined in any one of the above
(16) to (18), wherein, in the resistance discriminating step, a data base storing
data for slime control agents for microbes recited at effective concentrations is
searched using, as the search key, the microbe detected in the above microbe analyzing
step or the slime control agent presently on use, whereupon it is judged that the
microbe searched is not resistant against the slime control agent presently on use,
when an effective concentration of the slime control agent presently on use for the
microbe searched is recorded therein, but is judged as being resistant, when such
effective concentration is not recorded.
(20) The method for inhibiting slime formation as defined in any one of the above
(16) to (19), wherein the samples for the microbe analyzing step are collected at
least two locations selected from the group consisting of pulp raw material preparation
system, broke system, paper manufacturing chemical preparation system, stock preparation
system, white water circualtion system and white water recovering system.
(21) A method for analyzing cling substance on products of manufacture in paper manufacturing
process, comprising
extracting from the cling substance adhering on the product of manufacture the DNA
originated from each microbe and
performing analysis of the microbial biota or the dominant microbe in the cling substance
by making use of the resulting base sequence of DNA as analysis parameter.
(22) A method for inspecting the causal basis of occurrence of cling substance on
products of manufacture in paper manufacturing process, comprising
extracting from the cling substabce adhering on the product of manufacture the DNA
originated from each microbe,
performing analysis of the microbial biota or the dominant microbe of the cling substance
by making use of the resulting base sequence of DNA as analysis parameter and
identifying the slime that caused the cling substance by comparing the microbial biota
or the dominant microbe with the microbial biota or the dominant microbe in the slimes
that occurred in paper manufacturing process courses.
(23) A method for controlling microbes occurring in paper manufacturing process courses,
comprising
extracting from cling substance adhering on a product of manufacture the DNA originated
from each microbe,
performing analysis of the microbial biota or the dominant microbe of the cling substance
by making use of the resulting base sequence of DNA as analysis parameter,
determining the location of occurrence of the slime that caused the cling substance
by comparing the microbial biota or the dominant microbe of this slime with the microbial
biota or the dominant microbe in the slimes that occurred in paper manufacturing process
courses and
performing an antimicrobial/antiseptic treatment at the so-determined location of
occurrence of the slime.
(24) The method as defined in any one of the above (21) to (23), wherein the DNA to
be used for analyzing the microbial biota or the dominant microbe is that which codes
ribosomal RNA.
[0045] In the context of this specification, "microbe" encompasses bacteria, yeast, fungi
(mold), algae and archaebacteria etc.
[0046] The "antimicrobial agent" does mean a reagent having biocidal effect and/or growth
inhibiting effect on the above microbes and includes in general those which are called
antibacterial agent, bactricide, bacteriostatic agent, growth inhibitor, slime control
agent and preservative.
[0047] The word "antimicrobe" does mean a function of making such microbe extinct and/or
of inhibiting growth thereof.
[0048] The word "microbial biota" is used in the meaning of representing each kind of the
microbes in an objective system or in a sample, proportion of their constitution and
contents thereof (population or proportion of microbe amount), while it may also be
used occasinally in the meaning of representing kind of dominant microbe, proportion
of constitution thereof and content thereof or representing kind of specific microbes
and their proportion and content.
[0049] The terms "result of experience of practical treatment" and "effect of treatment"
mean both the effect upon the application of antimicrobial agent to an objective system.
This effect may be expressed also by the difference in the amount of growth of slime
(permissible also by the difference in the amount of the microbe or in the thickness
of the slime), for the case of, for example, using a slime control agent in paper
manufacturing process courses. Expression by the period of time till a definite amount
of growth is reached may also be permitted. It may include representation by the degree
of intrinsic trouble caused by the slime formation in the objective system.
[0050] The "white water treating agent" means a slime control agent to be used in the white
water circulation system. The "origin treating agent" means a slime control agent
to be used by adding it to the site of origin of occurrence of the reagent-resistant
microbe.
[0051] The word "cling substance" means a contaminant matter occurring on a paper product
called defect (also called hole, spot or fish eye).
[0052] The word "data base for search for antimicrobial agent" is used in the same meaning
as "data base for search for treating agent".
○ Method for selecting antimicrobial agent
[0053] The method for selecting antimicrobial agent according to the present invention comprises
a microbe analyzing step in which microbes in the microbial biota of a sample are
analyzed based on base sequence of DNA and
an antimicrobial agent selecting step comprising performing search in a data base
storing data for industrial antimicrobial agents applicable to the analyzed microbes
recited at effective concentrations, picking up industrial antimicrobial agents effective
for the microbial biota, dominant microbe or specific microbe(s) in the sample analyzed
in the above microbe analyzing step and selecting among the picked up ones one or
more industrial antimicrobial agent.
[0054] Such a method for selecting antimicrobial agent can be utilezed for selecting an
antimicrobial agent (slime control agent) in, for example, antimicrobial treatment
as mentioned above, monitoring antimicrobial effect, inhibition of slime formation
in paper manufacturing process courses and inhibition of occurrence of microbes in
paper manufacturing process.
[0055] In the method for selecting antimicrobial agent according to the present invention,
microbial biota is analyzed in the microbe analyzing step based on base sequence of
DNA, wherein known techniques can be utilized for the analysis of microbial biota
without any limitation. In the analysis of microbial biota, determination (identification)
by nomenclature for each microbe may not always be necessary, but instead, may assign
therefor private address number permitting distinction from other microbes (in the
following referred to as microbe number) for use in the place of academic nomenclature.
For instance, when a microbe having high homology with the analyzed one is not retrieved
from the data base for search for microbes, it is possible to assign therefor a microbe
number originally to distinguish from other microbes. However, it may be favorable
to identify microbes by each nomenclature based on base sequence, since use of name
of each microbe (by nomenclature) may be favorable in putting information of the microbial
biota to public.
[0056] For identifying (deciding) a microbe, it is able to have resort to, for example,
a data base of phylogenetic classification of microbes (data base for search for microbes)
in which relationships between the base sequences of DNA and microbes are stored.
By search in this data base using a computer, such as personal computer, a microbe
to be dealt with can be identified. Access to a definite data base for search for
microbes, which is described later, can be realized via internet, so that search for
data can be attained promptly. In the data base for search for microbes as described
later, data for base sequenses of various DNA that encode ribosomal RNA (rRNA), denoted
as rDNA, are stored, so that base sequence of each rDNA isolated from the sample can
be utilized for identifying the microbe to be dealt with. While rDNA sequences are
classified into several classes (such as 16S rDNA, 18S rDNA and so on) in accordance
with the kind of microbe and the size of subunit, any sequence may be permitted to
use. It is permitted to utilize for the technique according to the present invention
not only rDNA sequences but also other DNA regions and genes, such as the spacer sequences
of rDNA,
gyrE and so on. Therefore, whatever data bases for search for microbes may be permitted
to utilize, wherein utilization of data bases in a form integrated into one unit may
also be permitted. It is also permitted to utilize a plurality of data bases concurrently.
[0057] For the data base for search for microbes, there may be enumerated, for example,
public DNA data bases, such as GenBank, EMBL and DDBJ, as well as Ribosomal Database
Project installed in the University of Michigan. Operation of search can be realized
in a brief time efficiently by existing programs, such as FASTA and BLAST and the
like. It is also possible to search in a commercial data base, such as MicroSeq 16S
rDNA Sequence Database (trademark, of PE Biosystems Japan, Ltd.), using a commercially
available software, such as MicroSeq Analysis Software (trademark, of PE Biosystems
Japan, Ltd.). It is also permitted to construct a data base for search for microbes
privately. For instance, a data base may be constructed from data for base sequences
so as to permit to attain search for the name of microbe corresponding thereto or
for the microbe number permissible of distinguishing the microbe using, for example,
known data base software, which may be used concurrently with other data base for
search for microbe.
[0058] From a sample collected from the objective system, through isolation of colony of
a microbe, the base sequence of DNA corresponding to the isolated strain is determined,
whereupon the obtained result is compared with the data from the data base, whereby
the microbe can be identified. While rDNA can be isolated and amplified by classical
cloning techniques using a host/vector system of, for example, E. coli or so on, it
is simple and convenient to perform amplification by means of an in vitro amplification
of DNA, such as PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) technique.
[0059] It is also possible to identify microbes by extracting DNA of the microbes in mixture
without isolating each microbe by culture, effecting amplification of only rDNA of
each microbe by in vitro amplification of DNA, such as the PCR technique, using a
primer constituted of a base sequence having high degree of commonness to most microbes
to be dealt with, isolating each rDNA originated from each individual microbe by,
for example, gel electrophoresis, and comparing the obtained result with the data
from the data base.
[0060] In the case of identifying a plurality of microbes, a rough distinction between them
may be attained by means of the technique by RFLP (Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism;
Moyer et al, Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
62, 2501 - 2507 (1996)) before determination of base sequences. Namely, rDNA sequences
of the microbes are subjected to complete digestion using various restriction enzymes
and are then subjected to separative electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gel or agarose
gel, whereupon they can be distinguished based on the difference in the pattern after
staining the DNA.
[0061] In a technique in which each microbe is detected by isolation of colony among a group
of microbes, a non-culturable microbe, if present, can not be detected. Even for microbes
which can be subjected to isolate culture in culture medium, there is no assurance
that all the culturable microbes are detected with only one single culture medium
or culture condition. On the other hand, in a technique in which each microbe is detected
by extracting microbial DNA from mixture of microbes without isolating each individual
microbe, there are differences between microbes in the extraction rate, in the number
of copies of corresponding genes, in the amplification rate upon PCR and in the susceptibity
which is different among the detected group of microbes by the manner of selection
of the primer, though it reveals an advantage that even microbes not permissible of
being subjected to isolate culture in culture medium can be detected. Therefore, this
technique may be incorporated solely or in an adequate combination with other technique,
insofar as the characteristic nature of this technique given above and the characteristic
features of microbes found in the objective system has been grasped.
[0062] For isolating rDNA of individual microbe from rDNA mixture, electrophoresis is used
in general, for which several techniques have been proposed. They are, for example,
DGGE (Denatured Gradient Gel Electrophoresis; Muyzer et al, Applied and Environmental
Microbiology,
59, 695 - 700 (1993)); TGGE (Temperature Gradient Gel Electrophoresis; Eichner et al,
Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
65, 102 - 109 (1999)); SSCP (Single Strand Conformational Polymorphism; Schwieger et
al, Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
64, 4870 - 4876 (1998)); TRFLP (Terminal Restiction Fragment Length Polymorphism; Liu
et al, Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
63, 4516 - 4522 (1997)) and the random cloning (Dunbar et al, Applied and Environmental
Microbiology,
65, 1662 - 1669 (1999)). The method for selecting antimicrobial agent according to the
present invention is not limited to the use of these techniques.
[0063] Further, it is possible according to each special purpose to use other techniques,
such as real time PCR for detecting a specific microbe in a mixed microbe system (Wittwer
et al, BioTechnique,
22, 130 - 138 (1997)); FISH (Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization; Ammon et al, Applied
and Environmental Microbiology,
58, 614 - 623 (1992)) and classical hybridization techniques (for example, William et
al, Microbiology,
141, 2793 - 2800 (1995)), for the method for selecting antimicrobial agent according to
the present invention. Also for the restriction enzymes and the primers to be employed
for these known techniques, for which various ones have been known, volunary known
ones may be used.
[0064] From isolated and amplidied rDNA, the base sequence thereof can be directly determined
by experimental procedures. For such a series of procedures, reagent kits found in
the market, such as for example, AutoRead Sequencing Kit (trademark, of Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech Corp.) and MicroSeq 500 16S rDNA Kit (trademark, of PE Biosystems Japan, Ltd.)
may be used. It is of course possible to carry out procedures by having resort to
such a technique as the dideoxy method, by preparing privately reagent, such as DNA
polymerase or so on. For the analysis apparatus, a commercially available base sequence
analyzing apparatus, such as for example, ALFexpress II DNA Analysis System (trademark,
of Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Corp.) or ABI PRISM 310 (trademark, of PE Biosystems
Japan, Ltd.) may be employed. It is of course possible to utilize polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis, in which the band positions (sequencing ladder) can be determined
by, for example, autoradiography.
[0065] For a sample of rDNA mixture, it is permissible to perform in such a manner, that
the bands resulting from elecrophoresis are stained and each band is cut out together
with the gel, whereupon the so cut out gel is treated so as to extract the DNA followed
by purification, before being subjected to PCR again, in order to use the amplified
DNA for determining the base sequence of the DNA.
[0066] For carrying out search in existing data bases for search for microbes, methods have
been put to the public, which can be used within the range assigned for each data
base, to permit to avail of.
[0067] It can be judged by comparing the detected base sequence of the DNA of a microbe
found in the sample with each DNA base sequence registered in the data base, that
the microbe found in the data base having a base sequence of DNA which has higher
most homology with that found in the sample is the microbe of most close relation
thereto.
[0068] Between identical microbes, 100 % homology has to be recognized in the base sequence
of the gene selected as the parameter, except for some exceptional cases (for example,
polymorphism in a plurality of copies on a genome). Between closely related microbes
of identical species of identical genus, a homology close to 100 % is recognized,
though some difference may be present for each specific kind of the gene. For example,
for 16S rDNA, a homology of about 98 % or higher is recognized. Therefore, if a homology
of 98 % or higher, preferably 99 % or higher, is recognized on comparison of corresponding
base sequence between microbes, they can be judged in general as belonging to identical
species of identical genus. If the homology is less than 98 %, they are not judged
as belonging to identical species of identical genus but, instead, may be designated
by a private microbe number to use it in the place of the microbe name.
[0069] The constitional proportions of the identified microbes in the biota can be determined,
for example, from proportions of the colonies, proportion of each DNA and so on. In
a method in which each colony is isolated to inspect, the constitutioal proportions
of these microbes can be calculated by selecting a statistically reliable number of
colonies at random and performing identification of microbe for all the selected colonies.
In a method in which the DNA for each microbe is directly analyzed from a microbe
mixture, it is assumed that the constitutional proportions of microbes may be grasped
from the ratio of the observed strength of each DNA band relative to the integrated
strength of all the DNA bands, since the strength of a DNA band observed in, for example,
the method of DGGE or TGGE, is understood to reflect the population of each microbe.
For determining the band strength, a commercially available densitometer or a scanner-cooperating
image analysis device {such as for example, ImageMaster (trademark, made by Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech Corp.) and others} may be employed. Also, it may be possible to
use a DNA primer bound with a fluorescent reagent or, in the case where a fluorescent
substance is used for staining the bands after the electrophoresis, it is possible
to observe the strength of the fluorescence directly using a fluorescence image analyzer,
for example, FluorImager (trademark, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Corp.). Further, by
FISH method, the constitutional proportion of microbes can be obtained by observing
count of stained microbe cells for each kind of microbe directly under microscope
and calculating the proportion thereof relative to the entire microbe counts.
[0070] The absolute amount of microbe individuals per a unit volume or unit weight of culture
medium can be determined by a known method, for example, counting the number of colonies
on a plate culture medium, a method by MPN (Most Probable Number) or a method of counting
individual microbe cells directly under microscope after having been stained with
a fluorescent substance, such as DAPI (4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole), acrydine orange
or CFDA (carboxyfluorescein diacetate). It is possible to calculate the content of
each specific microbe in the medium by multiplying the absolute number by the constitutional
proportion of the microbe. In the case of real time PCR method or a classical hybridization
method, the starting number of microbe cells or the starting amount of DNA in the
tested sample can be presumed using a specific microbe or a specific DNA of known
concentration as a reference object and subjecting this reference object to a reaction
under the same condition as that for the sample.
[0071] In the method for selecting antimicrobial agent according to the present invention,
the data base to be used in the antimicrobial agent selecting step (in the following
referred to sometimes as data base for search for antimicrobial agent) may be of any
type, so long as it stores at least data for microbes and for effective concentrations
of various antimicrobial agents for each of these microbes and permits search and
picking up of antimicrobial agents of which effective concentrations are recorded,
by using, as the search key, a microbe. For the search key, there may be employed,
for example, the microbe name, the accession number and the microbe number, detected
from data base for search for antimicrobial agent. The microbe may be represented
by the scientific name (for example,
Escherichia coli HB101 and the like) or by the accession number thereof. It may be permissible to
use a privately designated microbe number for such a microbe or a DNA, which is not
permitted to identify by scientific name. The search key can be inputted by an inputting
device, such as keyboard or the like. The data for effective concentration may be
any of those obtained from culture experiment for each microbe, those obtained from
experiences in practical treatments or those obtained from existing literatures.
[0072] The fact that an effective concentration is recorded does mean that the antimicrobial
agent has an antimicrobial effect on the microbe recited there at the recited concentration.
Here, it may be permitted that a plurality of concentrations of an antimicrobial agent
are recited to indicate presence or absence of antimicrobial effect or to indicate
the degree of effectiveness at such concentrations. In such a case, picking up of
antimicrobial agent is made at the recited effective concentration of the antimicrobial
agent.
[0073] For the data base for search for antimicrobial agent, such one may favorably be used
which permits addition and accumulation of data as to, for example, the microbe name
and the effective concentration of antimicrobial agent therefor, upon each occasion
of appearance of unregistered new microbe or new base sequence.
[0074] For the data base for search for antimicrobial agent, preference is given also for
such one, in which data for effective concentrations of antimicrobial agents for various
microbes under each environmental condition having influence on the growth of the
microbe are stored and which permits to pick up antimicrobial agents among those given
under designated environmental conditions. For concrete examples of environmental
condition, there may be enumerated pH, temperature, each specific objective system
and the identification class thereof, each specific nutrient substratum and concentration
thereof and materials affecting the antimicrobial function, such as reducing agent
etc., as well as their concentrations. As to each specific objective system and its
identification class mentioned above, there may be recited for papermaking process
course, the papermaking technique employed, conditions for papermaking, kind of paper
product, the kinds and application concentrations of various internal additives, such
as for example, sizing agent, retention aid and paper strengthening aid, and the kind
of antimicrobial agent that is used in the past. For cooling water systems, there
may be recited, for example, the source of make up water, quaity thereof, gaseous
components from atmospheric air contained therein, residence time of cooling water
and others including reagents employed. For the objective system for preservative
treatment, there may be recited, for example, the objective substratum and the treating
period required. By the way, for the case where the effective concentrations of antimicrobial
agents recorded in the data base are those obtained by culture experiment, the above-mentioned
conditions, such as pH and temperature, belong to culture condition and, for the case
where the data are obtained from experiences of practical treatment, the above conditions
of pH, temperature and so on fall under the environmental condition of the objective
system.
[0075] For pH as an environmental condition, it is favorable that effective concentrations
at a plurality of pH values are recorded in the data base. For example, the data may
preferably be recorded at pH of 5, 6, 7 .... Also as for temperature and other conditions,
it is favorable that effective concentrations at a plurality of conditions are recorded
in the data base, as in the case of pH. When the data as to the effective concentration
are recorded for each environmental condition as above, it is possible to search effective
antimicrobial agents using a condition of, for example, pH value of 6 and a temperature
of 20 °C, as the search key.
[0076] For the data base for search for antimicrobial agent, preference is given further
for such one, which permits to calculate the difference in the amount of each microbe
in the microbial biota before and after the use of antimicrobial agent and to record
the result of calculation, when the results of analyses of the microbial biota as
well as the results of practical treatment before and after the use of antimicrobial
agent are inputted thereinto, permitting thus addition, accumulation and revision
of data by performing judgement from the result of calculation as to whether or not
the concentration of the antimicrobial agent used was effective for the microbes.
By using such a data base for search for antimicrobial agent, a more pertinent antimicrobial
agent can be selected.
[0077] For the data base for search for antimicrobial agent, preference is given furthermore
to such one, which calculates the difference in the amount of each microbe in the
microbial biota before and after the use of antimicrobial agent on inputting the analysis
results of microbial biota as well as the concentrations of the antimicrobial agent
used before and after the use of the antimicrobial agent and judges then, based on
the result of calculation, as to whether or not the concentration of the antimicrobial
agent used was effective for the existing microbes, followed by comparison of the
result of judgement made based on the experiences of practical treatment with the
result of judgement made based on culture experiment carried out for the culturable
microbes contained in the objective system (i.e. the collected sample) to judge that
the effectiveness of the antimicrobial agent in the practical treatment was far greater,
within proper range or far lower, as compared with that in the culture experiment,
so as to permit addition, accumulation and revision of data. By using such a data
base as above, it is made possible to assess the effectiveness of the antimicrobial
agent used under actual environmental condition accurately so as to permit to select
more pertinent antimicrobial agent.
[0078] The data base for search for antimicrobial agent may preferably be such that data
for the charactristic properties and antimicrobial effectiveness of antimicrobial
agents recited in literaturs etc. as well as for the prices of antimicrobial agents
have been recorded therein. The data base may further preferably be capable of addition
and accumulation of new data as to, for example, experiences of practical treatments,
test results and experimental results.
[0079] The data base for search for antimicrobial agent storing more data as given above
permits to realize selection of more pertinent antimicrobial agent.
[0080] Since the antimicrobial spectrum of an antimicrobial agent for microbes not permitting
isolated culture in culture medium cannot be observed by laboratory culture experiment
using pure culture of bacterium strain, it is necessary for the information of, for
example, effective concentrations of antimicrobial agent for such microbes, to accumulate
many data for experiences of practical treatments.
[0081] For instance, a practical measure as given below may be helpful: A format for a data
base for search for antimicrobial agent may preliminarily be prepared in such a way
that the results of analyses of the microbial biota before and after application of
an antimicrobial agent as well as the effect of the antimicrobial treatment attained
thereby, concentration of the antimicrobial agent maintained in the system (replaceable
by the maintained concentration obtained by calculation from the application concentration)
and other environmental conditions of the objective system having influence on the
growth of microbes and on the antimicrobial effect of the antimicrobial agent are
additionally inputted and recorded one by one in the data base upon application of
said antimicrobial agent to the system. A column is installed in the data base for
search for antimicrobial agent having the obove format, which column is capable of
storing, as the result of calculation, the difference in the microbial biota of the
system before and after the application of the antimicrobial agent assuming that the
microbe(s) present before the application of the antimicrobial agent but disappeared
after the application of the antimicrobial agent have been exterminated by the antimicrobial
agent applied. By incorporating such a technical measure, it is able to judge that
the microbe(s) disappeared after the application of the antimicrobial agent were susceptible
to the nati-microbial agent applied at the concentration maintained in the system
and, on the other hand, that the microbes showing unchanged or increased population
were non-susceptible or resistant to the antimicrobial agent applied at the concentration
mantained in the system.
[0082] For assessing the propriety of the so-evaluated effectiveness of antimicrobial agent
for a series of microbes, there may be employed a method as given below:
[0083] The antimicrobial activity determined by a laboratory experiment of a specific culturable
microbe found in a sample collected from the objective system is called out from the
data base, since such sample contains usually at least one or two or more culturable
microbes, in order to judge, by collating the antimicrobial activity obtained by laboratory
experiment with the above evaluated effectiveness of the antimicrobial agent, whether
or not the said microbe was held in a susceptible range at the concentration of the
antimicrobial agent maintained in the objective system, wherein it is judged that
the data for the antimicrobial activity determined by calculation in the above application
example for a series of microbes are within a proper range when no contradiction is
found within a tolerable limit (which may be settled voluntarily) as compared with
the result of the laboratory experiment. A column is provided in the data base for
recording result of judgement and the above judgement result may be entered in this
column. If any data of laboratory experiment is not available, a data from new laboratory
experiment using the microbe isolated here may be added in the data base.
[0084] When a substance deteriorating the activity of antimicrobial agent, such as a reducing
substance, is contained in the objective system to be treated, the antimicrobial effect
dertermined in the manner as above should be lower as compared with the antimicrobial
effect determined by the laboratory experiment. Thus, the antimicrobial effect should
have been affected by contaminant substance present in the system and the data therefor
should be an underrated one. Therefore, for the so-obtained series of underrated data,
designation of "underrated" may be labelled on the above-mentioned column. When, on
the other hand, the rest of the antimicrobial agent used in the forgoing process course
is carried over into the objective system, the activity of the antimicrobeial agent
used may be overrated. For such a case, a designation of "overrated" may be labelled
on the column.
[0085] When a format for the data base for search for antimicrobial agent having a writing
column as given above is laied down and many data from application examples are accumulated
therein, it may be made possible to select an effective antimicrobial agent from a
group of data in the proper range, when an antimicrobial agent effective for certain
microbes not permitted to culture isolately in culture medium has to be searched.
[0086] When, in the case where an antimicrobial agent to be used to apply to an objective
system is newly selected, a substance deteriorating or emphasizing antimicrobial activity
of such antimicrobial agent is present concurrently in the objective system, the group
of data which were judged as "underrated" or "overrated" can constitute an important
element for selecting antimicrobial agent, so that it is preferable to store them
in the data base without being discarded.
[0087] For the computer software for constructing the data base for search for antimicrobial
agent to be used in the method for selecting antimicrobial agent according to the
present invention, commercially available softwares, such as Micrisoft Exel (trademark)
or Microsoft Access (trademark) of Microsoft Corp., though there is no special restriction
and any one may be employed, so long as it suffices the purpose. As to the function
for permitting search for the contemplated items, for example, activities of antimicrobial
agents and environmental conditions, from the corresponding scientific name of a microbe
or the accession number, such function is intrinsically provided in such a software
and can be availed of. For a software lacking in such function, addition may be permitted
in combination with a known technique.
[0088] By selecting antimicrobial agent in the manner as given above, an antimicrobial agent
which is at the most adapted to the objective system to be treated can easily and
accurately be selected within a brief time.
○ Process for effecting antimicrobial treatment
[0089] The process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention
consists in a technique comprising, instead of using the empirical practice for selecting
antimicrobial agent depending on a prior technique, such as for example, sterilizing
test, growth inhibiting test or microbial cell counting by agar plate, the steps of
analyzing the microbial biota of the objective system based on base sequence of DNA,
collating the analyzed microbial biota with a data base capable of search for antimicrobial
agent, selecting an antimicrobial agent which is at the most adapted, to avail of
it.
[0090] The objective system to which the process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according
to the present invention is applicable is not specifically limited, so long as it
deals with a system treated with antimicrobial agent(s). There may be recited, for
example, systems in which one or more industrial slime control agents are used, such
as paper manufacturing process courses, cooling water system and ultrapure water production
system; and systems, such as starch slurry for paper manufacturing, paste liquor and
water-soluble cutting oil for metal machining in which preservative is used.
[0091] In the process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention,
a sample is collected first from the objective system. It is assumed that a plurality
of kinds of microbe may be present usually in such a sample. Then, the microbial biota
of the collected sample is analyzed based on base sequence of DNA, whereupon pertinent
antimicrobial agents are selected from the data base. For the analysis of the microbial
biota and for the selection of antimicrobial agents, the procedures employed in the
microbe analysing step and in the antimicrobial agent selecting step described in
the above method for selecting antimicrobial agent can be utilized as such.
[0092] The process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention
comprises, collecting first a sample containing microbes, such as slime, white water,
circulating cooling water and objective material for antiseptic treatment, from the
objective system and performing analysis of the microbial biota of the collected sample
based on base sequence of DNA, in order to identify each microbe constituting the
microbial biota of the collected sample by referring to the microbe name or to the
accession number (corresponding to the microbe name). Usually, the series of the above
examination operations may be completed within a period of 2 - 7 days.
[0093] Then, search in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent is carried out using,
as the search key, the microbe identified by the above analysis, whereby antimicrobial
agents are searched and picked up. Here, the antimicrobial agents to be searched can
be limited into more narrow extent when experimental condition etc are inputted. The
result of picking up of the antimicrobial agent may be outputted on an output device,
such as a display. If only one antimicrobial agent was picked up, this antimicrobial
agent will constitute the selected one and, if a plurality of antimicrobial agents
were picked up, selection is made among them. The selection of the antimicrobial agent
to be served for actual application among the picked up antimicrobial agents may be
carried out in any arbitrary way, for example, by human visual choice, by automatic
choice by computer or so on. Concrete manner of selection may include, for example,
the following cases:
1) An antimicrobial agent revealing a minimum effective concentration which is at
the most low for all the microbes or for the dominant microbe is selected.
2) An antimicrobial agent which is at the most effective for a preliminarily designated
specific microbe is selcted.
3) Selection is effected in such a way that a certain microbe which is resistant against
the antimicrobial agent shall be neglected for its presence, when the occupation proportion
thereof is not higher than an arbitrarily settled limit, but the selection shall be
made only with respect to the antimicrobial effect for the microbe, when the occupation
proportion exceeds over the settled limit.
4) An antimicrobial agent, with which the value

is the lowest for the dominant microbe or for a certain specific microbe, is selected.
In this case, selection can be attained taking into account of treating cost.
[0094] These forms of selection may be inputted preliminarily in the data base, so as to
constitute a part of the function thereof.
[0095] While the criterion for selecting antimicrobial agent may be settled by a simple
choice from the experiences accumulated over a long term, it is favorable that the
criterion may permit to be revised under reference to the rate of success after accumulation
of an amount of data in the early stage in which not so much data have yet been accumulated
in the data base.
[0096] By performing the selection of antimicrobial agent in the manner as above, an antimicrobial
agent which is at the most adapted to the microbial biota of the objective system
can be selected in an assured way within a brief time.
[0097] By the process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention,
the objective system is treated with the antimicrobial agent selected as above, wherein
the selection of the antimicrobial agent may be repeated either at a regular interval
or at any voluntary occasion.
[0098] For instance, the process may be proceeded in such a manner that a sample containing
microbes is collected periodically or at a voluntary occasion from the objective system
and the microbial biota of the collected sample is analyzed based on base sequence
of DNA. in the manner as described above, whereupon the result of this analysis is
compared with the result of the preceding analysis to watch any variation in the effect
of the antimicrobial agent by the variation in the microbial biota. When no significant
change is recognized in the microbial biota and an effect of the antimicrobial agent
is noted, the antimicrobial agent presently on use is succeedingly employed. On the
other hand, when a tendency to appearance of a microbe resistant against the antimicrobial
agent presently on use is recognized, search in the data base for search for microbe
is performed in order to pick up and select an antimicrobial agent effective for said
microbe found to have said tendency to appearance. For instance, when an increase
in the population of certain specific microbe (or DNA) is confirmed together with
a marked increase in the deposition of cling substance in an objective system in which
certain antimicrobial agent(s) were used succeedingly, it is to be judged that a tendency
to appearance of a microbe exhibiting resistance against the antimicrobial agent used
is recognized, if the said microbe (or said DNA) has been registered in the data base
as having significant resistance against the said antimicrobial agent or if the said
antimicrobial agent is found to have a resistance against the said antimicrobial agent
from experiment, assuring presence of certain causal relation between the variation
in the microbial biota and the increase in the resistance of the microbe against the
antimicrobial agent. In this manner, it is possible to perform the antimicrobial treatment
using an antimicrobial agent which is regarded as being optimum at that point of time,
by repeating the analysis of the microbial biota and the selection of antimicrobial
agent.
[0099] By the process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention,
it is able to judge, upon occurrence of trouble in an objective system caused by growth
of microbe, whether the cause therefor is based on appearance of a reagent-resistant
microbe or not, within a brief time. Therefore a countermeasure for the trouble can
promptly be taken by changing the antimicrobial agent to a new pertinent one for the
cause of appearance of a resistant microbe or by revising the actual way of application
of the antimicrobial agent (application concentration, manner of application etc.)
or correcting the environmental condition of the objective system for other causes.
[0100] The process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention
can be carried out by incorporating, in combination, experimental results of, for
example, sterilizing experiment, growth inhibiting experiment and microbe cell counting,
which have not been recorded in the data base.
○ Method for monitoring antimicrobial treatment effect
[0101] The method for monitoring antimicrobial treatment effect according to the present
invention permits to monitor the effect of antimicrobial agent based on base sequence
of DNA, by watching perodically or at a voluntary occasion any variation in the microbial
biota in the objective system to which the antimicrobial agent has been applied.
[0102] Namely, a sample containing microbes is collected from the objective system periodically
or at a voluntary period after application of the antimicrobial agent to the objective
system and the microbial biota of the sample is analyzed based on base sequence of
DNA as mentioned above, whereupon the result of this analysis is compared with the
result of the preceding analysis to watch any variation in the effect of the antimicrobial
agent by the variation in the microbial biota. When no significant variation in the
microbial biota is recognized and the effect of the antimicrobial agent is admissible,
the antimicrobial agent presently on use is used succeedingly. When a microbe not
detected in the preceding analysis of the microbial biota is newly detected, collation
is made with the data base as to whether or not the new microbe is non-susceptible
or resistant to the antimicrobial agent presently on use. If the new microbe is susceptible
to the antimicrobial agent, watching is continued as before, assuming that the antimicrobial
agent is still effective for this microbe. If the new microbe is not susceptible or
resistant to the antimicrobial agent, collation is made with the data base to search
for antimicrobial agents effective for this new microbe in the manner described above
to select an effective antimicrobial agent, whereby any trouble due to microbe can
easily and assuredly be prevented.
[0103] By monitoring the antimicrobial effect in the manner as above, a precautional countermeasure
can be taken preliminarily before, for example, a reduction in the antimicrobial effect
or any trouble is brought about in the objective system. Thus, in the method for monitoring
antimicrobial treatment effect according to the present invention, the monitoring
means and the criterion for judging alteration of antimicrobial agent are provided
by the analysis of the microbial biota and by the data base for search for antimicrobial
agent, respectively.
○ Method for inhibiting slime formation in paper manufacturing process courses
[0104] The method for inhibiting slime formation in paper manufacturing (in the following,
sometimes referred to simply as the "slime formation inhibiting method") according
to the present invention is directed to its application in paper manufacturing process
courses, wherein no limitation is given to the kind of paper, specific process of
paper manufaturing and so on. In paper manufacturing factory, a practice of slime
control treatment has widely been employed, using a white water treating agent containing,
as the main component, 2,2-dibromo-3-nitrilopropionamide (in the following, sometimes
abbreviated to DBNPA). The slime formation inhibiting method according to the present
invention can be applied adaptively to the process courses of such a paper manufacturing
factory.
[0105] There is no special restriction as to the slime control agent to be used in the slime
formation inhibiting method according to the present invention, permitting thus use
of known slime control agents, and any slime control agent adapted for each specific
process course can be selected and used as a white water treating agent or as a microbe
origin treating agent. The white water treating agent and the microbe origin treating
agent may be composed of constituents which may be made of organic compound or of
inorganic compound. These constituents of the slime control agent may be made of a
single reagent or be made of a composite reagent in which a plurality of agents are
combined together. Also, there is no restriction in the form of slime control agent
used and it may be in a form of, for example, liquid agent, flowable agent or hydrated
agent. There is also no restriction for combimation of white water treating agent
with microbe origin treating agent and, thus, even a combination not bringing about
a synergistic effect may be permitted.
[0106] As concrete examples of the slime control agent, there may be recited those based
on inorganic and organic compounds as given below:
Slime control agents based on inorganic compound:
clorine, hypochlorites, chlorine dioxide, chlorinated cyanuric acid, chlorinated hydantoin,
bromine, reaction product of hypochlorite with bromide ion and so on.
Slime control agents based on organic compound:
1) Surface active agents based on quaternary ammonium salt, such as didecyldimethylammonium
chloride (in the following, sometimes abbreviated to DDAC) and so on.
2) Isothiazolones, such as 5-chloro-2-methyl-4-isothiazolin-3-one, 2-methyl-4-isothiazolin-3-one,
5-chloro-2-n-octylisothiazolin-3-one and 1,2-benzoisothiazolin-3-one, and metal complex
salts of them.
3) Thiocyanates, such as methylene bisthiocyanate and so on.
4) Bromoacetates, such as 1,4-bis(bromoacetoxy)-2-butene, 1,2-bis(bromoacetoxy)ethane
and bis(bromoacetoxy)propane.
5) Bromocyano compounds, such as 2,2-dibromo-3-nitrilopropionamide and 1,2-dibromo-2,4-dicyanobutane.
6) Bromonitro compounds, such as 2,2-dibromo-2-nitro-1-ethanol, 2-bromo-2-nitropropane-1,3-diol,
β-bromonitrostyrene and 2,2-dibromo-3-nitrilopropionamide (DENPA).
7) Oximes, such as monochloroglyoxime, dichloroglyoxime, 2-(p-hydroxyphenyl)glyoxyhydroximoyl
chloride, α-chlorobenzaldoxime and α-chlorobenzaldoxime acetate.
8) Aldehydes, such as o-phthalaldehyde, glutaraldehyde and formaldehyde.
9) Others, such as 2,2-dichloro-1,2-dithiol-3-one, 2,4,5,6-tetrachloroisophthalonitril,
3.3.4,4-tetrachlorohydroxythiophene-1,1-dioxide
[0107] In a paper manufacturing process course including a plurality of origins of occurrence
of a microbe having resistance against antimicrobial agents used, it is favorable
to select a microbe origin treating agent adapted for each of the origins and to apply
the selected treating agent to the corresponding origin. In the case where a plurality
of resistant microbes resistant against the white water treating agent are present,
it is favorable to select a microbe origin treating agent having antimicrobial activity
for each of the resistant microbes and to apply the selected origin treating agent
to the origin. Even in the case where a slime control agent has been used for the
purpose of preservative treatment or prevention of denature, as in the systems for
preparing papermaking reagents, such as the starch preparation system and dyestuff
system, it is favorable to select a microbe origin treating agent to apply it additionally
to the origin, so long as such system includes a site of origin of microbe occurrence.
[0108] In the method for inhibiting slime formation according to the present invention,
the microbial biota of the collected sample is analyzed based on base sequence of
DNA, whereupon a slime control agent which is at the most adapted to the microbe detected
by the analysis is selected by search in the data base. For the analysis of the microbial
biota and for the selection of slime control agent, the procedures described in the
paragraph of method for selecting antimicrobial agent for the microbe analyzing step
and for the antimicrobial agent selecting step can be applied as such. In the following
description of the slime formation inhibiting method, the "data base for search for
treating agent" corresponds to the data base for search for antimicrobial agent used
in the method for selecting antimicrobial agent.
[0109] The slime formation inhibiting method according to the present invention realizes
first, as the microbe analyzing step, to collect samples from a paper manufacturing
process course where slime formation inhibiting treatment is carried out using a slime
control agent (white water treating agent). Then, the microbial biota of each sample
is analyzed by a biota analyzing method based on base sequence of DNA. Here, every
microbe constituting said microbial biota is searched by referring to the microbe
name or the accession number (corresponding to the microbe name) by the method given
above. Usually, the series of the above examination operations may be completed within
a period of 2 - 7 days. In the microbe analyzing step, only the identification of
microbe is performed and the quantitative analysis of its population may be omitted.
[0110] While there is no restriction as to the site for collecting the sample and samples
can be collected at every voluntary location in paper manufacturing process courses,
samples are collected at two or more locations, preferably at 5 - 20 locations. The
greater the number of locations of sample collection, the more accurately the origin
of occurrence of resistant microbe can be determined.
[0111] Concretely, samples of slime, white water and internal liquor in tanks and vessels
may be collected from process courses, for example, pulp raw material preparation
system composed of CGP (chemical ground pulp) pulper, CGP chest, LBKP (laubholz bleached
kraft pulp) pulper, LBKP chest and so on; broke system composed of wet broke pulper,
wet broke chest, dry broke pulper, dry broke chest and so on; papermaking chemical
preparation system composed of sizing agent tank, aluminum sulfate tank, dyestuff
tank, slime contol agent tank, internal starch liquor tank and so on; stock preparation
system composed of mixing chest, machine chest, stuff box and so on; white water circualtion
system composed of paper machine, screen unit, machine inlet, saveall, white water
silo and so on; and white water recovering system composed of dehydrator, clear white
water pit and so on.
[0112] Then, judgement is made, in a resistance discriminating step, as to whether or not
the microbe detected in the microbe analysing step mentioned above is resistant against
the slime control agent (white water treating agent) now on use. For example, search
in the data base is performed using, as the search key, the microbe detected in the
microbe analysing step or the slime control agent now on use, whereupon it is judged
that the microbe under search is not resistant aganst the slime control agent now
on use, when effective concentration of the slime control agent (white water treating
agent) now on use for the microbe under serach is recorded in the data base, or is
judged to be resistant, when no record is found as to the effective concentration.
It is also possible to judge presence or absence of the resistance from, for example,
known literatures or from the results of culture experiments. Further, it is possible
to judge for a microbe to have a resistance against a white water treating agent,
when a tendency to growth of this microbe is recognized even though the microbe is
held under treatment with the white water treating agent, by comparing the result
of analysis with that of the preceding analysis.
[0113] Thereafter, judgement is made as to the site of origin of occurrence of the resistant
microbe that the location of collection of the sample that showed highermost proportion
of existence of the resistant microbe is the site of origin of occurrence of such
microbe. The site of origin of occurrence of a microbe may occasionally be present
in plural numbers. In the case where analysis of the microbial biota of the sample
is incorporated in the microbe analyzing step, the constitutional proportion or the
content of each microbe has already been determined, so that a renewed determination
of the proportion of existence of the resistant microbe is unnecessary and the site
of origin can be judged from the already determined proportion of existence. On the
other hand, in the case where only the kind of the microbe is analyzed in the above
microbe analyzing step, the site of origin of occurrence of the resistant microbe
is judged from the result of determination of the proportion of existence performed
by the method as given above for the sample in which the resistant microbe is detected.
[0114] Subsequently, search in the data base for search for treating agent is carried out
in a slime control agent selecting step using, as the search key, the microbe that
is judged in the above resistance judging step as being resistant against the slime
control agent, in order to pick up the slime control agents of which effective concentrations
for the resistant microbe are recorded in the data base. Here, the slime control agents
to be searched can be limited to a more narrow extent when environmental condition
etc. are used as the search key. The result of picking up may be outputted on an output
device, such as a display. For the case where only one slime control agent was picked
up, this slime control agent constitutes the selected one and, for the case of a plurality
of slime control agents, selection is effected among them. The manner for selecting
a slime control agent to be used actually as the microbe origin treating agent among
the picked up ones is arbitrary and can be performed, for example, by human visual
choice, by automatic choice by computer and so on. Concrete manner of selection may
include, for example, the following cases:
1) A slime control agent exhibiting a minimum effective concentration which is at
the most low for the resistant microbe is selected.
2) A slime control agent, by which the value

is the lowest for the resistant microbe, is selected. Here, selection can be effected
taking into account of the treating cost.
[0115] These forms of selection may be inputted in the data base for search for treating
agent, so as to constitute a part of the function thereof.
[0116] While the criterion for selecting the slime control agent may be settled by a simple
choice from the experiences accumulated over a long term, it is favorable that the
criterion may be permitted to be revised especially in the early stage in which not
much data have yet been accumulated in the data base, taking into account of the rate
of success upon each accumulation of data.
[0117] Then, in an origin treating agent adding step, the new slime control agent selected
in the above slime control agent selecting step, namely, an origin treating agent
which is different from the white water treating agent presently on use, is added
to the site of origin of occurrence of the resistant microbe judged as resistant in
the above microbe origin determining step.
[0118] By the slime formation inhibiting method according, to the present invention, the
microbe origin determining step may be omitted. Here, the new slime control agent
(the origin treating agent) selected in the slime control agent selecting step is
added to the location of collection of the sample that showed high proportion of existence
of the resistant microbe judged in the resistance discriminating step.
[0119] By the technique as described above, it is able to select a slime control agent most
adapted to the resistant microbe within a brief time in an assured way, together with
attainment of minimization of the amount of the slime control agent to be used, since
such slime control agent can be added to the site of origin of occurrence of the microbe.
[0120] The slime formation inhibiting method according to the present invention permits
to repeat certain series of steps including the microbe analysing step and so on at
a regular interval or at any volumtary occasion.
[0121] For instance, samples are collected at a regular interval or at a voluntary occasion
from paper manufacturing process courses and the microbial biota of each sample is
analyzed based on base sequence of DNA, whereupon the result of this analysis is compared
with that of the preceding analysis to watch any variation in the effect of the slime
control agent used by the variation in the microbial biota. When no significant change
in the microbial biota is recognized and an effect of the slime control agent is to
be admitted, this slime control agent is used succeedingly. On the other hand, when
a decrease in the proportion of existence of a resistant microbe is found, addition
of the origin treating agent may be stopped. When a new resistant microbe is further
detected, a new origin treating agent for this new microbe is selected to use.
[0122] In this manner, slime formation inhibiting treatment can be performed using a slime
control agent which is at the most adapted at that point of time by carrying out the
analysis of the microbial biota and the selection of the origin treating agent repeatedly.
[0123] By the slime formation inhibiting method according to the present invention, it is
able to judge within a brief time whether or not a trouble occured due to growth of
microbe in a paper manufacturing process course held under treatment with a slime
control agent is caused from occurrence of a microbe resistant against the slime control
agent presently on use, so that a prompt responce to the trouble can be made by changing
the slime control agent for the cause due to occurrence of resistant microbe or, otherwise,
by taking pertinent steps as to the practical manner of application of the slime control
agent (such as the application concentration and practical manner of application)
and as to the alteration of environmental condition appeared, since these may be assumed
to be the other cause.
[0124] It is able in the slime formation inhibiting method according to the present invention
to make use of a above-data base for search for treating agent as given above for
selecting the white water treating agent. For example, a slime control agent to be
used as the white water treating agent can be selected, by performing search in the
data base using, as the search key, the microbe found in the paper manufacturing process
course as the dominant microbe, to pick up slime control agents and selecting among
the picked up ones one or more slime control agents to be used as the white water
treating agent.
[0125] The slime formation inhibiting method according to the present invention permits
to make use of, in combination, the results of, for example, preservative experiments,
growth inhibiting experiments and microbe cell counting, which have not yet been recorded
in the data base, for the selection of the slime control agent.
○ Method for analyzing cling substance on products of manufacture in paper manufacturing
process
[0126] The method for analyzing cling substance on products of manufacture in paper manufacturing
process (in the following, referred to sometimes simply as the analyzing method) according
to the present invention can be applied to paper products produced in paper manufacturing
process, wherein there is no limitation in the kind of paper, the manufacturing technique
and so on. The paper manufacturing process is in general composed of process courses,
for example, the stock preparation course in which the raw material for papermaking
is prepared by adding fillers and reagents to pulp, the papermaking course in which
paper is produced on a paper machine and the coating course in which the surface of
paper is coated with paint or other material(s) to improve adaptability to printing.
The analyzing method can be applied to paper products produced through these process
courses.
[0127] There is no special restriction in performing the method according to the present
invention for extracting DNA originated from microbe(s) which cause the cling substance
on paper products and the method can be performed, for example, in such a way that
the cling substance (defect) or the portion of the paper product including the cling
substance is cut out and is scissored, whereupon the scissored product is immersed
sufficiently in an extracting liquor, such as a buffer solution, followed by processing
by a physical treatment, such as mechanical crushing, or a chemical treatment, such
as treatment with a surfactant or with an enzyme, solely or in combination, in order
to extract the DNA originated from the cells of the microbes in the cling substance.
Here, the extraction of DNA can be realized even if the microbes are extinct.
[0128] As concrete techniques for the above physical treatment, there may be exemplified
ultrasonic crushing, freezing/thawing and homogenization using micronous glass beads
or mineral beads. As concrete techniques of the above chemical treatment, there may
be exemplified enzymatic treatments, for example, those using bacteriolysing enzymes,
such as lysozymes; polysaccharide decomposing enzymes, such as cellulase and alginate
lyase; and protein decomposing enzymes, such as protease and peptidase; and those
using surfactants, for example, anionic surfactants, such as sodium lauryl sulfate
and so on; and nonionic surfactants, such as Triton-X 100 and so on. By the physical
or chemical treatment, DNA are obtained in a dissolved form. They may preferably be
further purified. For purifying the DNA, known techniques can be employed, for example,
desolvatic precipitation by organic solvents, such as ethanol and isopropanol; and
adsorption on glass beads or resin particles.
[0129] For detecting the characteristics of each microbe and the constitutional proportion
thereof based on the base sequence of the extracted DNA, the relative content of the
base sequence that permits identification of the microbe is determined. For identifying
the dominant microbe, it is assumed that the microbe of which relative content determined
as above was high constitutes the dominant microbe. Such analysis of the microbial
biota can be performed by making use of the practical procedures of the microbe analyzing
step described for the above method for selecting antimicrobial agent as such. Namely,
there may be used as the DNA permitting identification of each microbe, any DNA segment
so long as all the microbes to be analyzed have this DNA segment, wherein preference
is given to such DNA segment for which a data base capable of identifying the microbe
from the base sequence has already been constructed, such as those which code ribosomal
RNA (rDNA), for example, 16S rDNA, 18S rDNA and 23S rDNA, and spacer sequences for
them, and
gyrE or the like.
[0130] While it is possible to determine the kind of DNA and the relative content thereof
by dot hybridization or by an efficient hybridization method using DNA chip, using
the extracted DNA directly as the target, it is usual to employ an in vitro amplification
by, for example, polymerase chain reaction (PCR), to amplify the DNA to attain the
determination. For example, for 16S rDNA, this can be amplified in a mixture using
all the extracted DNA as the template by means of universal primers designed for a
base sequence present commonly in most of microbes.
[0131] Since 16S rDNA is extracted as a mixture of two or more originated from two or more
microbes that caused the cling substance, the mixture of 16S rDNA is subjected to
an amplification to determine the constitutional proportion of each DNA by the amplified
mixture, wherein it is made possible to identify each microbe name based on the detected
corresponding DNA, whereby the dominant microbe and microbial biota of the cling substance
can be identified. For determining the constitutional proportion of each DNA, known
techniques may be utilized, such as the techniques based on electrophoresis, for example,
DGGE (denatured gradient gel electrophoresis; Muyzer et al, Applied and Environmental
Microbiology
59, 695 - 700 (1993)), TGGE (temperature gradient gel electrophoresis; Eichner et al,
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
65, 102 - 109 (1999)) and SSCP (single strand comformational polymorphism; Schwieger
et al, Applied and Environmental Microbiology
64, 4870 - 4876 (1998)) and isolation technique, such as TRFLP (terminal restriction
fragment length polymorphism; Liu et al, Applied and Environmental Microbiology
63, 4516 - 4522 (1997)). A rough calculation of the constitutional proportion of microbes
can be attained by determining the amount of amplifiied product intrinsic to each
microbe and calculating the proportion thereof relative to the entire amplified product.
By using the above techniques based on electrophoresis or TRFLP, the amplified products
can be detected, for example, as the intensity of the band of the DNA or as the fluorescence
intensity corresponding to the TRF, and the constitutional proportion of the microbes
can be detected by the ratio of such intensities.
[0132] The microbial biota can also be identified by subjecting the amplification product
to a random cloning using an established host vector system, such as
Escherichia coli (Dunbar et al, Applied and Environmental Microbiology
65, 1662 - 1669 (1999)), and analyzing the genes of the resulting clones and their constitutional
proportions.
[0133] Identification of a microbe by DNA of its gene can be achieved by determining the
base sequence of the DNA by, for example, DNA sequencer, and comparing the analyzed
base sequence with the corresponding data in the data base, whereby taxonomical localization
and microbiological nomenclature of the microbe having corresponding DNA can be attained.
For an analysis sample in which DNA of one single kind of microbe occupies nearly
about 90 % of the entirety, the base sequence of the dominant microbe can be determined
by direct determination of the base sequence of the amplified produt. Different DNA
molecules may be isolated by, for example, electrophoresis, wherein the corresponding
band of DNA molecule is collected from the gel and is subjected to amplification again
by PCR, whereupon the base sequence of each DNA can be determined using DNA sequencer.
[0134] For the data base for search for microbes, there may be enumerated, for example,
public DNA data bases, such as GenBank, EMBL and DDBJ, as well as Ribosomal Database
Project installed in the University of Michigan. Operation of search can be realized
in a brief time efficiently by existing program, such as FASTA and BLAST and the like.
It is also possible to search in a commercial data base, such as MicroSeq 16S rDNA
Sequence Database (trademark, of Applied Biosystems Japan, LTD.), using a commercially
available software, such as MicroSeq Analysis Software (trademark, of Applied Biosystems
Japan, Ltd.). It is also permitted to construct such a data base privately for utilization.
When microbe name of a microbe is not able to identify from the data base, it may
be assumed that the microbe is a near related one having nearmost homology with that
in the data base or that the microbe belongs to a new species.
[0135] By analyzing the microbial biota or the dominant microbe in the cling substance in
the manner as above, the names of the microbes, the constitutional proportions thereof,
the dominant microbe and so on can easily be identified within a brief time in an
assured manner, without having resort to culture of microbe.
○ Method for inspecting the causal basis of formation of cling substances
[0136] The method for inspecting the causal basis of formation of the cling substances on
paper products according to the present invention consists in a technique in which
the microbial biota or the dominant microbe in the cling substance identified by the
method for analyzing cling substance as detailed above is compared with the microbial
biota or the dominant microbe in the slime appearing in a paper manufacturing process
course, wherein the slime of which microbial biota or the dominant microbe that is
in accord with or close to that in the cling substance is judged to be the causal
slime for the formation of cling substance. The microbial biota or the dominant microbe
can be identified in the same manner as in the identification of the microbial biota
or the dominant microbe in the cling substance using the base sequence of DNA as the
analysis parameter, as given above.
[0137] There is no restriction in the location for collecting the sample of slime and it
is permitted to collect samples at any location in paper manufacturing process courses,
wherein samples may favorably be collected at two or more locations, preferably at
5-20 locations. The greater the number of locations of sample collection, the more
accurately the causal slime that caused the cling substance can be determined.
[0138] Concretely, samples of slime may be collected from process courses, for example,
pulp raw material preparation system composed of CGP (chemical ground pulp) pulper,
CGP chest, LBKP (laubholz bleached kraft pulp) pulper, LBKP chest and so on; broke
system composed of wet broke pulper, wet broke chest, dry broke pulper, dry broke
chest and so on; papermaking chemical preparation system composed of sizing agent
tank, aluminum sulfate tank, dyestuff tank, slime contol agent tank, internal starch
paste tank and so on; stock preparation system composed of mixing chest, machine chest,
stuff box and so on; white water circualtion system composed of paper machine, screen
unit, machine inlet, head box, saveall, white water silo and so on; and white water
recovering system composed of dehydrator, clear white water pit, tubes in CP (consistency
profiling control system) and so on; and elements and instruments around the paper
machine, such as wire, wheel and so on. It is possible to roughly presume the possible
site of origin of occurrence of slime based on the analysis of microbial biota or
the dominant microbe, by collecting samples of, for example, white water, tank inner
liquor etc., and performing the analysis by the above-mentioned analyzing method,
whereupon collection of sample is focussed mainly to such presumed possible locations.
[0139] The method for inspecting the causal basis of slime formation according to the present
invention can attain detection of the location where the causal microbe for the cling
substance crowds at high population or the site of origin of occurrence thereof in
an easy and assured manner, since the slime that caused the formation of cling substance
is identified by comparing the result of analysis of the microbial biota or the dominant
microbe in the cling substance with that in the slime occurred in paper manufacturing
process courses.
○ Method for controlling microbes
[0140] The method for controlling microbes occurring in paper manufacturing process courses
according to the present invention consists in a technique in which the location of
occurrence of the slime that caused the cling susbstance is detected in the manner
as given in the above method for inspecting the causal basis of formation of cling
substance, whereupon an antimicrobial/preservative treatment is performed at the so-detected
location of occurrence of the slime.
[0141] The antimicrobial/preservative treatment can be performed by, for example, applying
to the location of occurrence of the slime a slime control agent having antimicrobial/preservative
activity to the microbes, especially the dominant microbe, constituting the slime.
The slime control agent to be applied can be decided by, for example, performing antimicrobial
experiment. It is also possible for the case where the name of the causal microbe
has been identified to use a chemical which is known to have an antimicrobial/ preservative
activity to the microbe. It is also possible to select the slime control agent from
the data base for search for antimicrobial agent by the method given in the antimicrobial
agent selecting step described in the paragraph of the method for selecting antimicrobial
agent.
[0142] By the method for controlling microbes as described above, occurrence of defect on
paper product can be prevented efficiently and rationally at a lower cost, without
relying on empirical or circumstantial judgement, since the method provides for a
technique, in which a treating agent effective for the causal microbe is selected
in an assured manner and which can afford to realize antimicrobial/preservative treatment
focussed substantially onto the site where the causal microbe densely populates or
vigorously propagates, using lowest necessary amount of the treating agent.
[0143] As described above, it is able by the method for selecting antimicrobial agent to
attain selection of the optimum antimicrobial agent simply within a brief time in
an assured manner, since the method provides for a technique in which the microbial
biota of the sample is analyzed based on, base sequence of DNA and an industrial antimicrobial
agent adapted at the most to the microbial biota is selected by making use of a data
base.
[0144] The process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention
can afford to effect antimicrobial treatment efficiently by selecting an optimum industrial
antimicronial agent in accordance with each specific microbial biota of the objective
system within a brief time, since the process provides for analyzing the microbial
biota of the objective system based on base sequence of DNA and using an industrial
antimicrobial agent adapted at the most to the microbial biota selected from a data
base.
[0145] The method for monitoring antimicrobial treatment effect according to the present
invention can afford to judge in a simple but assuered manner within a brief time
whether or not the activity of the antimicrobial agent has been revealed to thereby
enable to prevent occurrence of troubles caused by growth of microbes beforehand,
since the method provides for analyzing the microbial biota of the objective system
based on base sequence of DNA and watching the effect of the antiicrobial agent based
on the variation in the microbial biota detected by the analysis.
[0146] The slime formation inhibiting method according to the present invention can afford
to select a slime control agent which is adapted at the most to the resistant microbe
within a brief time in an assured manner and to attain an efficient inhibition of
slime formation with minimum amount of the slime control agent, since the method provides
for analyzing the microbial biota of the objective system based on base sequence of
DNA and selecting, when occurrence of a microbe which is resistant against the antimicrobial
agent is recognized, a slime control agent which is at the most adapted to the resistant
microbe from a data base to apply it to the site of origin of occurrence of the resistant
microbe.
[0147] The method for analyzing cling substance on a paper product in paper manufacturing
process according to the present invention can afford to identify the causal microbe
that caused the defect on the paper product, in a simple and assured manner, since
the method provides for extracting the DNA originated from the microbe in the cling
substance and analyzing the microbial biota or the dominant microbe of the cling substance
by using the base sequence of the extracted DNA as analysis parameter.
[0148] The method for inspecting the causal basis of formation of cling substances on paper
products in paper manufacturing process courses according to the present invention
can afford to identify the site of origin of occurrence of the causal microbe that
caused the defect on the paper product, in a simple and assured manner, since the
method provides for extracting the DNA originated from the microbe in the cling substance,
analyzing the microbial biota or the dominant microbe of the cling substance by using
the base sequence of the extracted DNA as analysis parameter and comparing the so
analyzed microbial biota or the dominant microbe with that of the slime occurred in
paper manufacturing process courses to determine the slime that caused the cling substance.
[0149] The method for controlling microbes occurring in paper manufacturing process courses
according to the present invention can afford to determine the location of occurrence
of the microbe that caused the defect on the paper product in a simple and assured
manner and to suppress occurrence of defect on paper products in a simple and assured
manner, since the method provides for extracting the DNA originated from the microbe
in the cling substacne, analyzing the microbial biota or the dominant microbe of the
cling substance by using the base sequence of the extracted DNA as analysis parameter,
comparing the so analyzed microbial biota or the dominant microbe with that of the
slime occurred in paper manufacturing process courses to determine the location of
occurrence of the slime that caused the cling substance and performing an antimicrobial/
preservative treatment at the so-determined location of occurrence of the slime.
[0150] Below, the description is directed to the process for effecting antimicrobial treatment
according to the present invention with reference to the drawings appended.
[0151] Fig. 1 is a flow diagram of the apparatus for paper manufacturing, to which the process
for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention is to be
applied, shown in an embodiment of antimicrobial treatment of white water system.
[0152] In the apparatus shown in Fig. 1, the numerals indicate, 1: paper machine, 2: stuff
box, 3: white water pit, 4: microbe biota analysing system, 5: antimicrobial agent
selecting system, 6: control system, 7a, 7b: antimicrobial agent storage disposed
in plural numbers.
[0153] On the apparatus shown in Fig. 1, paper is produced in the manner as follows: A pulp
slurry is supplied via a line 11 into the apparatus under adjustment of flow rate
at the stuff box 2 and is guided by a pump 12 via lines 13 and 14 to a screen unit
15, where contaminant materials are removed, before being sent via a line 17 to the
inlet 18. The pulp slurry is then supplied from the inlet 18 to the wire part 21 of
the paper machine 1. The white water passed through the wire part 21 is received in
a saveall 22 and is collected via a line 23 in the white water pit 3. A part of the
white water in the white water pit 3 is admixed to the pulp slurry through the line
14 for reuse under recirculation. The remainder is discharged out via a line 24. The
web of damp pulp formed on the wire part 21 is processed through subsequent process
courses, such as drying (not shown) etc., into a paper product.
[0154] For performing the antimicrobial treatment in the apparatus as given above, a sample
of white water containing microbes is collected from the white water pit 3, for which
analysis of microbial biota is carried out in the microbial biota analyzing system
4. Based on the result of this analysis, an anitimicrobial agent is selected in the
antimicrobial agent selecting system 5. The analysis of the microbial biota in themicrobial
biota analysing system 4 and the selection of the antimicrobial agent in the antimicrobial
agent selecting system 5 are performed according to an operation flow schedule, for
example, that shown in Fig. 2.
[0155] The result of operation of the antimicrobial agent selecting system 5 is inputted
into the control system 6, whereby the selected antimicrobial agents are added to
the stuff box 2 from the antimicrobial agent storages 7a, 7b, .... via each reagent
injection line 27a, 27b, ...., so that each designated antimicrobial agent will reach
a designated concentration.
[0156] By maintaining the admixed antimicrobial agent dissolved in the white water and in
the pulp slurry under recirculation in the paper manufacturing apparatus, the entire
apparatus will be held under antimicrobial treatment. The adjustment of the concentration
of antimicrobial agent may be realized automatically by controlling the amount of
addition thereof by inputting corresponding signals to each actuator of the pump 28a,
28b .... from the control system 6.
[0157] The sampling of white water from the white water pit 3 may be carried out at regular
interval or at an arbitrary occasion, whereupon the analysis of the microbial biota
of the sample and the selection of the antimicrobial agent are performed. By this,
an antimicrobial agent which is at the most adaptive at this point of time can be
selected and the antimicrobial treatment can be realized at the highest effectively.
[0158] While Fig. 1 shows the case where the sample is collected from the white water pit
3, sampling may be effected at any other location, such as the screen unit 15, the
machine inlet 18, the saveall 22 or so on. While Fig. 1 shows three antimicrobial
agent storages 7a, 7b ..., two or four or more may be permitted.
[0159] Fig. 2 is a flow diagram showing the operation flow schedule in the microbial biota
analysing system 4 and in the antimicrobilal agent selecting system 5 for an embodiment
in which a data base, that stores data of antimicrobial agents at concentrations effective
for microbes under each specific environmental condition so as to permit selection
of antimicrobial agents within a more narrow extent, is employed.
[0160] According to the flow diagram of Fig. 2, a sample containing microbes is collected
from the objective system in the step 31 and, in the step 32, the counts of colonies
brought from the sample and the total number of microbe cells are determined. The
total number of microbe cells may be determined by a known technique, for example,
by counting the cells after stained with, for example, acridine orange or DAPI, directly
under a fluorescence microscope. In the case where the results may be presupposed
from the environmental condition for an objective system for which experiments have
been carried out many times, the procedures of step 32 can be omitted.
[0161] In the step 33, comparison of the number of colonies with the total number of microbe
cells is performed. If both the numbers are nearly equal, analysis of rDNA of the
colony-forming microbe is carried out in the step 34. On the contrary, if both numbers
are unequal, rDNA analysis for all the microbes including non-colony-forming microbes
is performed in the step 35.
[0162] Then, in the step 36, search in the data base for serach for microbes is made based
on the base sequence determined in the above analysis. Here, search may be performed
in a plurality of data bases for search for microbe. Based on the result of the search,
each of the microbes is identified in the step 37 (determination of the microbial
biota). If, in this case, identification of microbe name is not permitted, a private
microbe number may be assigned to the microbe.
[0163] In the subsequent step 38, search in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent
is performed using the microbe name that is identified in the step 37, the accession
numer or the privately assigned microbe number as the search key. If antimicrobial
agents were picked up in the step 39, selection of the antimicrobial agent may be
limited into a more narrow extent by using the environmental conditions as the search
key in the step 40 and, when sucessful examples are found with the searched antimicrobial
agent, this antimicrobial agent is selected as the treating agent to be used for the
antimicrobial treatment in the step 41. Here, the concentration of the antimicrobial
agent for the treatment is also determined. When a plurality of antimicrobial agents
are put up as candidates, the selection may be done taking into account of the cost
performance and so on.
[0164] In case no antimicrobial agent is picked up by search in the data base for search
for antimicrobial agent in the step 39, the operation schedule is carried over to
the step 42 where the discrimination as to whether the microbe in question is a colony-forming
microbe or not is made by reference to the result of the step 33, wherein, for the
case where the microbe is a colony-forming microbe, a laboratory culture experiment
thereof is carried out in the step 43 for examining the resistance to various antimicrobial
agents, whereupon the selection is made based on the result of this culture experiment
(step 44). When the microbe is judged to be a non-colony-forming microbe in the step
42, selection of antimicrobial agent is performed in the step 45 besed on, for example,
the experiences in the past and so on.
[0165] Using the antimicrobial agent selected in the manner as above, the antimicrobial
treatment is carried out in the step 46.
[0166] Then, the effect of the treatment is judged in the step 47 and, when the antimicrobial
effect is not better, this result is inputted in the data base for search for antimicrobial
agent (step 48), whereupon the operation schedule is returned to the step 31 of sample
collection and the operations thereafter are repeated again. If the microbe identified
thereby is the same as that identified previously, an antimicrobial agent different
from that selected in the former operation is selected among those restricted in the
step 40. When the result of analysis of DNA in the step 34 or 35 is identical with
that in the former operation, the search in the data base for search for microbe in
the step 36 may be omitted.
[0167] When the effect of the treatment is judged in the step 47 to be better, this result
is inputted in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent (step 49), whereupon
the operation schedules downstream from the step 31 are repeated, after a certain
arbitrary interval has elapsed (step 50).
[0168] While, in the operation flow schedule shown in Fig. 2, selection of the antimicrobial
agent is made by performing a culture experiment for colony-forming microbe in the
case where no antimicrobial agent is permitted to be picked up in the step 39, it
may be possible to effect the selection based on, for example, experiences in the
past and so on.
[0169] By following the operation schedules given as above, the proportion of the case where
the judgement of "no" is made in the steps 39 and 40 will successively be decreased
as the data of the results are accumulated in the data base on the course of progress
of experiences of the actual antimicrobial treatment while inputting the results in
the data base, whereby an adaptive antimicrobial agent will eventually become able
to be selected only by retrieving in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent.
[0170] Now, the description is directed to the method for inhibiting slime formation according
to the present invention by reference to the appended drawing.
[0171] Fig. 3 is a flow diagram of paper manufacturing apparatus to which the method for
inhibiting slime formation according to the present invention is to be applied.
[0172] In Fig. 3, the numeral 51 represents a CGP pulper, 52 is a CGP chest, 53 is an LBKP
pulper and 54 is an LBKP chest, which constitute the pulp raw material preparation
system.
[0173] The numeral 56 represents a wet broke pulper, 57 a wet broke chest, 58 a dry broke
pulper and 59 a dry broke chest, which constitute the broke system.
[0174] The numeral 61 denotes a sizing agent storage, 62 an aluminum sulfate storage, 63
a dyestuff storage, 64 a white water treating agent storage and 65 an internal starch
paste storage, which constitute the papermaking chemical preparation system.
[0175] The numeral 67 denotes a mixing chest, 68 a machine chest and 69 a stuff box, which
constitute the stock preparation system.
[0176] The numeral 71 denotes a paper machine, 72 a screen unit, 73 a machine inlet, 74
a saveall and 75 a white water silo, which constitute the white water circulation
system.
[0177] The numeral 77 denotes a separator-thickener and 78 a clear white water pit, which
constitute the white water recovery system. The numeral 81 indicates an industrial
water pit and 82 represents an external starch paste storage.
[0178] On the apparatus shown in Fig. 3, paper is produced in the manner as follows:
[0179] The pulp as the raw material of paper is guided into the CGP pulper 51, LBKP pulper
53, wet broke pulper 56 and dry broke pulper 58 and is there disintegrated to form
a slurry which is guided via the chests 52, 54, 57 and 59 into the mixing chest 67.
Thereto are admixed a sizing agent 91 and aluminum sulfate 92 and, then, an inner
starch paste 93 in the machine chest 68 to build up a pulp slurry 94. This pulp slurry
94 is guided into the stuff box 69, where a dyestuff 95 and a white water treating
agent 96 are admixed thereto and the resulting slurry is sent under adjustment of
the flow rate to the screen unit 72 by a pump 101, to remove there contaminant alien
matter, before being introduced into the machine inlet 73.
[0180] The so-introduced pulp slurry 94 is guided from the machine inlet 73 onto wire part
102 of the paper machine 71. The white water separated from the wire part 102 is once
received in the saveall 74 and is then collected in the white water silo 75. A part
of the white water 103 accumulated in the white water silo 75 is mixed with the pulp
slurry 94 in a line 104 and is reused under recirculation. The remainder of the white
water is sent to the separator-thickener 77 where it is separated from solid matters
and the thereby recovered raw materials are returnd back to the mixing chest 67 to
reuse. The filtrate is collected in the clear white water pit 78 and is reused in
the process courses. The pulp web formed on the wire part 102 is guided through the
subsequent process courses in a press part 105, drying part (not shown) and so on,
before being processed into the paper product. The brokes occurring in the press part
105 and in the drying part are transferred each as the wet broke and dry broke to
the wet broke pulper 56 and to the dry broke pulper 58, respectively, to reuse.
[0181] In the paper manufacturing process for producing paper as given above, a white water
treating agent 96, such as 2,2-dibromo-3-nitrilopropionamide (DBNPA), introduced from
the white water treating agent storage 64 and retained dissolved in the pulp slurry
94 and in the white water 103 is circulated in the white water circulation system,
whereby slime control in the white water circulation system is attained. Due to the
re-utilization of the clear white water 106 collected in the clear white water pit
78, slime control is also effected in the process courses where the clear white water
is reused.
[0182] From the paper manufacturing process courses held under treatment of slime control
in the manner as above, microbe-containing samples are collected at arbitrary two
or more locations and the microbial biota of each of the samples is analyzed by the
method described previously based on base sequence of DNA (microbe analyzing step).
The sampling may be effected at, for example, CGP chest 51, LBKP chest 53, wet broke
chest 56, dry broke chest 58, sizing agent storage 61, dyestuff storage 63, internal
starch paste storage 65, mixing chest 67, machine chest 68, white water silo 75, clear
white water pit 78, industrial water pit 81 and external starch paste storage 82.
[0183] Then, in the resistance discriminating step, judgement is made as to whether or not
the microbe detected in the above microbe analyzing step has a resistance to the white
water treating agent 96 now on use. For example, search is performed in the data base
for search for treating agent using the microbe detected in the above microbe analyzing
step or the white water treating agent presently on use as the search key, whereby
the microbe now on search can be judged as having no resistance to the antimicrobial
agent now on use, when the data for the effective concentration of the antimicrobial
agent now on use is found recorded for the antimicrobial agent now on use in the data
base, but can be judged as having resistance to the antimicrobial agent now on use,
when no such data is found recorded therein.
[0184] Subsequently, in the origin determining step, the sampling portion at which the collected
sample showed higher proportion of exsistence of the resistant microbe judged in the
resistance discriminating step as having resistance is judged to be the site of origin
of occurrence of the microbe. For example, when the proportion of existence of a microbe
resistant against DBNPA is the highest at the wet broke chest 56, it can be judged
that the site of origin of occurrence of the microbe is the wet broke chest 56. There
may be a case where a plurality of sites of origin of occurrence of the microbe are
detected.
[0185] Thereafter, in the slime control agent selecting step, search is made in the data
base for search for treating agent using the resistant microbe judged in the resistance
discriminating step to have resistence as the seach key to pick up each slime control
agent for which data of the effective concentration for the resistant microbe are
found inputted. Here, it is preferable to input environmental condition or the like
to restrict the extent of search for the slime control agent. When a plurality of
slime control agents were detected as the candidate, decision is made to select a
slime control agent to be used as the origin treating agent in such a manner that
a slime control agent which exhibits lowermost effective concentration for the resistant
microbe or a slime control agent for which the value

is the lowest is selected.
[0186] Then, in the origin treating agent adding step, the new slime control agent selected
in the slime control agent selecting step, namely, different from the white water
treating agent now on use, is added to the site of origin of occurrence of the resistant
microbe. For example, a slime control agent selected due to its effectiveness for
the resistant microbe, such as HPGHC, namely, 2-(p-hydroxyphenyl)glyoxylohydroximoyl
chloride, is added to the wet broke chest 56. The resistant microbe is thereby subjected
to an antimicrobial treatment at its origin of occurrrence effectively, whereby slime
formation is inhibited.
[0187] The sampling may be realized periodically or at an arbitrary interval repeatedly.
When effect of the origin treating agent is recognized, application of the origin
treating agent is stopped and ordinary treatment using the white water treating agent
is regained. When no effect of the origin treating agent is recognized, the origin
treating agent may be changed to another one or revision of the manner of application
of the origin treating agent (for example, application concentration, application
procedure etc.) or the environmental condition may be attempted.. When a new resistant
microbe is detected, corresponding new origin treating agent effective for the new
microbe is selected to use.
[0188] By performing the analysis of microbial biota and the selection of origin treating
agent repeatedly in the manner as above, a slime control agent which is at the highest
adaptive at that point of time can be selected within a brief time in an assured manner
with the advantage that the inhibition of slime formation can be performed using minimum
amount of slime control agent due to permission of application to the site of origin
of occurrence of the microbe.
THE BEST MODE FOR EMBODYING THE INVENTION
[0189] Below, the present invention is described by way of Examples.
EXAMPLE 1
〈〈 Experiment Example by a Laboratory Slime Formation Testing Apparatus 〉〉
[0190] A torque type slime formation testing apparatus was used, which is described in Japanes
Patent Kokai Hei 9-75065 A. The testing apparatus is constructed from a stationary
outer cylinder and a rotatable inner cylinder disposed concentrically with the outer
cylinder leaving a free space therebetween for allowing flow of water therein while
rotating the inner cylinder so as to permit to grow slime formed on the surface of
the inner cylider. To this testing apparatus, an artificial white water (containing
142 mg/liter of soluble starch and 11.6 mg/liter of ammonium sulfate and having a
pH of 7.0) was supplied continuously at a temperature of 30 °C so as to maintain a
residence time in the apparatus of 20 minutes, while adding thereto intermittently
a slime control agent containing as the main component DBNPA (dibromonitrilopropionamide)
three times a day each for a duration of 15 minutes at a contact concentration of
2.5 mg/liter. After operation of the test apparatus for 12 days, a slime was deposited
in a layer thickness of 119 µm, which was collected and scattered over a PY agar medium
(containing 1 g/liter of polypeptone, 1 g/liter of yeast extract, 0.5 g/liter of NaCl
and 1.5 % of agar with pH of 7.0) and was cultured thereon, whereupon 24 strains were
isolated at random from the maximum dilution agar plate. Each isolated strain was
taken up on a platinum loop and was suspended in 0.4 ml of TE buffer solution (10
mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA, pH 8.0) retained allotted in a 1.5 ml microcentrifugal tube.
[0191] To this suspension, there was added 0.8 grams of zirconia/silica beads (supplied
from Bio Spec Products, Inc.) of 0.1 mm size and the mixture was homogenized using
a cell crusher (BeatBeater of Bio Spec Products, Inc.) at the maximum output power
for one minute. After centrifugation at 8,000 G for 5 minutes, the supernatant was
used as template DNA solution in a polymerase chain reaction (PCR). For the reagent,
PyroBest DNA Polymerase (trademark, Takara Shuzo Co., Ltd.) was used and for the reactor,
GeneAmp 2400 (trademark, PE Biosystems Japan, Ltd.) was employed. For the primer,
5'-GAGTTTGATCMTGGCTCAG-3' and 5'-ACGGYTACCTTGTTACGACTT-3' were employd. The PCR was
performed for 30 cycles under a reaction condition of 94 °C for 0.2 minute, 55 °C
for 0.3 minute and 72 °C for 2 minutes, followed by the last cycle of 72 °C for 7
minutes. The resulting reaction product mixture was passed through a MicroSpin S-300
HR column (trademark, Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Corp.) to remove unreacted primer,
whereupon a part thereof was subjected to a sequencing reaction using BigDye Terminator
Cycle Sequencing FS Ready Reaction Kit (trademark, PE Biosystems Japan, Ltd.). For
the primer for sequencing reaction, 5'-GAGTTTGATCMTGGCTCAG-3' and 5'-CAGCMGCCGCGGTAATWC-3'
were employed.
[0192] The reaction product mixture was passed through AutoSeq G-50 column (trademark, Amersham
Pharmacia Biotech Corp.) to remove the unreacted nucleotides, whereupon it was heated
to cause denature, before it was passed to ABI PRISM 3000 Sequencer, in order to determine
the base sequence for the region of 500 bases from the 5' terminal. By identifying
each individual bacterium by making access to GenBank Database with respect to the
base sequence data obtained for all the isolated strains, it was confirmed that the
isolated 24 strains included 5 kinds of bacteria, among which a bacterium having a
16S rDNA having a homology of 98.1 % with the base sequence of one kind of bacterium
(which was identified as
Microbacterium sp.) belonging to the genus
Microbacterium registered in the DataBase with an accession number AB004728 occupied 75 % of the
entire bacteria population, constituting, therefore, the dominant microbe.
[0193] Further, by making search in a data base for search for microbe constructed privately
(a data base constructed by accumulating privately the results obtained from searches
made in the past) as to the base sequence of this isolated dominant microbe, it was
confirmed that a bacterium with completely identical base sequence had once been isolated,
which was found registered therein. with a microbe number 6354. By making search in
the data base for search for antimicrobial agent using this microbe number as the
search key, it was confirmed that the above
Microbacterium sp. is a chemical-resistant bacterium having resistance to DBNPA and that all the
other isolated bacteria are susceptible to DBNPA. For the sake of confirmation, sterilizing
experiment by DBNPA was carried out for all the isolated bactrinm strains afterwards,
which showed that the results obtained from the data base gave correct values.
[0194] For the
Microbacterium sp., search was made for the antimicrobial agent which brings about antimicrobial
effect at the lowest cost performance judged from the value

in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent. By this search, an antimicrobial
agent HPGHC, i.e. 2-(p-hydroxyphenyl)glyoxylohydroximoyl chloride, was detected, wherein
the minimum effective concentration thereof was determined to be 0.2 mg/liter. All
other isolated bacterium strains were susceptible to HPGHC.
[0195] Based on the above results, test experiment was carried out under the same experimental
condition except that HPGHC was used as the slime control agent so as to maintain
the concentration thereof in the system at 0.3 mg/liter. By this experiment, it was
recognized that the amout of cling substance was remarkably decreased and that the
slime had grown in the same test period only to a thickness of 3 µm. This HPGHC-treated
slime collected at this occasion was tested by analysis of microbial biota thereof
in the same manner as above, whereby
Microbacterium sp. was not detected.
[0196] In this Example, the time interval required after the sampling of the slime till
confirmation that the
Microbacterium sp. was the dominant microbe was 5 days.
[0197] The data base for search for antimicrobial agent employed in Example 1 was that constructed
by making use of Microsoft Access (trademark, Microsft Corp.), by inputting therein
the results of sterilizing experiments and growth inhibiting experiments carried out
for bacteria isolated from each of water systems and from the starch slurry, starch
paste and coating color liquor of a paper manufacturing factory using various antimicrobial
agents (slime control agents, preservatives and the original components of them) under
conditions of three levels of pH and three levels of temperature and by inputting
further the data integrally gathered from the practical results in the past obtained
using various antimicrobial agents.
[0198] The search in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent was performed using
only the functions of "sort", "autofilter" and "search" installed originally in the
Microsoft Access, wherein judgement was made by displaying the result of search on
a computer display.
EXAMPLE 2
〈〈 Example of Selection of Slime Control Agent at Paper Manufacturing Factory D〉〉
[0199] On the course of slime control which has been continued over a long term using an
antimicrobial agent constituted mainly of DBNPA in a long screen machine operating
for papermaking of medium quality paper, occurrence of a pink-colored bacterial slime
was recognized in the white water circulation system. Therefore, procedures corresponding
to those in Example 1 were proceeded, wherein each 24 cell strains were isolated from
each microbe in the slime collected at each of the locations where slime was found,
whereupon each strain was cultured on an agar medium to attain analysis of the microbial
biota of the collected slime. The results were such that the isolated cell strains
included 5 species of bacteria, wherein a bacterium which was found to have a 16S
rDNA having a homology of 99.5 % with
Deinococcus geothermalis recorded in the data base of GenBank with an accession number AJ000002 (and which
was therefore identified as
D. geothermalis) was found as occupying 46 % of the entire microbe population.
[0200] By making search in the same data base for search for antimicrobial agent as in Example
1 using
Deinococcus geothermalis as the search key, it was found that this bacterium belongs to a group resistant
to DBNPA. For the sake of confirmation, a sterilizing experiment for examining resistance
of this microbe to DBNPA was carried out afterwards, which showed that this bacterium
belongs certainly to a bacteria group resistant to DBNPA. By picking up antimicrobial
agents effective for this bacterium from the data base for search for antimicrobial
agent, it was recognized that a certain inorganic antimicrobial agent based on bromide
is adaptive under the condition of temperature and pH in this system. From a further
search made for other isolated microbes in this slime, it was found that there was
no microbe constituting this slime exhibiting a resistance to this inorganic antimicrobial
agent based on bromide. Therefore, this anitimicrobial agent was applied for actual
slime control treament at once, which resulted in that occurrence of not only the
pink-colored slime but also all other slimes was reduced remarkably. When a sample
of adherent materials formed in the white water silo was collected after a continuous
paper manufacturing operation for 25 days and the analysis of the microbial biota
thereof was performed in the same manner as above, it was found that the occupation
proportion of
Deinococcus geothermalis in the entire microbial biota was reduced to 4 %. Here, the time required after the
sampling of the slime until attainment of decision of new treating method via the
termination of the experiment was 6 days.
EXAMPLE 3
〈〈Example of Monitoring at Paper Manufacuring Factory D 〉〉
[0201] In the paper manufacturing factory D, another machine of a type similar to that used
in Example 2 operating under conditions similar to those in Example 2 is installed
adjacent to the machine of Example 2. In this machine, no occurrence of pink-colored
silme was recognized even at the occasion at which the pink-colored slime occurred
in the machine of Example 2. Therefore, procedures corresponding to those in Example
1 were proceeded, wherein each 36 strains were isolated using agar medium and analysis
of the microbial biota was carried out. Since a large number of strains are to be
tested, each 16S rDNA obtained from each strain was treated by digestion with three
kinds of restriction enzymes (
BstUI,
RsaI and
HhaI) isolatedly to effect TRFLP analysis, in order to group preliminarily into classes
of microbes of same reaction pattern, whereupon identification was effected based
on the base sequence as identification parameter. It was recognized thereby that the
occupation proportion of
Deinococcus geothermalis in the isolated 36 strains was calculated to be only 2.7 % (one strain).
[0202] Since the machine construction is similar, this machine would suffer from same trouble
by occurrence of pink-colored slime after a prolonged operation. Therefore, monitoring
of machine by prior practice was proceeded more enhancedly and, at the same time,
the analysis of the microbial biota of white water same as in the above test method
was performed at a more frequent interval, namely, at an interval of 7 - 14 days (with
increase in the number of isolated strains to 48). In addition, aligned three monitoring
demonstrators of basically the same construction as that of the slime tester of Example
1 were installed in this machine and were operated in the manner as follows:
[0203] One demonstrator was used as an intrinsic demonstrator (provisionally named No. 1
demonstrator) and was supplied continuously with the white water from the machine.
The two remainders were used each as a simulator demonstrator operated to simulate
the operation condition of the paper machine, wherein the feed rate of the white water
to the simulators was adjusted so as to settle the residence time therein at the same
value as that of the paper machine. On the other hand, white water devoid of DBNPA
content was reserved by storing in a storage reservoir the white water taken from
its supply line during a time interval discrepant from the DBNPA injection period,
to preserve a reagent-free white water for the test. Using each independent chemical
injection system, one simulator (denoted as No. 2 demonstrator) was supplied with
a DBNPA-containing tereating agent and the other one (denoted as No. 3 demonstroator)
was supplied with an an inorganic bromine compound each under the condition same as
that of the machine so as to simulate the treating condition of the machine, in order
to examine the antimicrobial effect of the DBNPA-containing agent and that of the
inorganic bromine compound under the condition same as the machine.
[0204] The results of analyses of the microbial biota were within the range of the occupation
proportion of
Deinococcus geothermalis of 2 - 4 % (1 or 2 strains in the 48 strains) up to the fourth test cycles. This
proportion rised to 6 strains among the entire strains (12.5 %) in the analysis result
obtained in the fifth test cycle performed on the 47th day after the first test. In
the concurrently performed tests for the effect of antimicrobial agents for white
water, the effect of DBNPA-containing treating agent was better within te range of
usual fluctuation up to that day. On the other hand, in the No. 3 demonstrator in
the aligned three demonstrators, no sign of growth of slime was noted. In No. 1 and
No. 2 demostrators, a sign of growth of slime was recognized, though adherent deposit
of slime was only within a slight extent of a slime thickness of a few µm.
[0205] By integrating these plurality of results, it was judged that the above change in
the analysis result was a sign of beginning of formation of the pink-colored slime
also in the paper manufacturing machine. Therefore, the antimicrobial agent applied
to the machine was changed from the DBNPA-containing agent to the inorganic bromine
compound (on the 5th day from the start of the test).
[0206] The result of analysis of the microbial biota of white water of the machine performed
on the 7th day after the change of the amtimicrobial agent showed that the original
state of biota was almost regained, as the microbe
Deinococcus geothermalis was present in only one strain among the isolated 48 strains (occupation proportion
of 2 %). The amount of slime deposition in the No. 1 demonstrator among the aligned
three demonstrators was below the lowest detectable limit. In contrast thereto, the
deposited amount of slime in the No. 2 demonstrator increased gradually and occurrence
of the pink-colored slime was visually recognized on the 14th day after the change
of the antimicrobial agent. From this, it was judged that this machine would have,
at high probability, suffered from slime trouble if the change of antimicrobial agent
was delayed for a couple of weeks.
[0207] From the above, it is made clear that the method for monitoring antimicrobial effect
according to the present invention is useful as a means for monitoring the effectiveness
of the antimicrobial treatment in a paper manufacturing machine held under treatment
with antimicrobial agent(s).
EXAMPLE 4
〈〈 Example of Selection of Slime Control Agent at Paper Manufacturing Factory O〉〉
[0208] On the course of slime control which had been continued over a long term by a cocurrent
application of a chlorine treatment and an antimicrobial agent constituted mainly
of DBNPA in a long screen machine operating for papermaking of medium quality neutral
paper, occurrence of a yellow-colored slime was recognized in the white water circulation
system. Therefore, in the same manner as in Example 1, each 24 strains were isolated
from the slime and analysis of the microbial biota by 16S rDNA was effected. It was
made clear thereby that 90 % of the microbial biota were occupied by a microbe having
a gene that has a homology of 98.0 % with the base sequence of 16S rDNA of a microbe
belonging to a genus
Microbacterium to be identified from the data base of GenBank with an accession number AB027702.
[0209] Then, by search in the above-mentioned privately constructed data base for search
for microbe as to the base sequence of the isolated dominant microbe, it was found
that a microbe having a base sequence which has a homology of 99.1 % with that of
the isolated dominant microbe had been registered therein with a microbe number 2401.
Therefore, search was made in a data base for search for antimicrobial agent using
this microbe number as the search key, whereby it was confirmed that this dominant
microbe belongs to a microbe group exhibiting resistance to DBNPA. Judgement based
on the value

under the environmental condition of the machine indicated that an antimicrobial
agent exhibiting efffectiveness on this dominant microbe is an antimicrobial agent
containing, as the main reagent, an inorganic bromine compound. Therefore, the slime
control treatment was performed from the subsequent operation on using solely an antimicrobial
agent based on inorganic bromine compound that was selected. Thereafter, during the
continued operation for 14 days, no visually discriminable occurrence of slime was
detected.
EXAMPLE 5
〈〈 Example of Selection of Preservative for Starch Slurry at Paper Manufacturing Factory
A 〉〉
[0210] In a starch paste (pH 9, 60 °C) for papermaking at the paper manufacturing factory
A, a phenomenon occurred in which the viscosity thereof had decreased within a short
time. In this system, an antimicrobial agent based on isothiazolone was used by injecting
continuously into the system at a concentration in terms of isothiazolone concentration
of 10 mg/ℓ. Observation of microbe cell count showed a population of (1.7 × 10E+ 8CFU)/ml,
which indicated an early stage of rotting. By performing the analysis of the microbial
biota in the manner as in Example 3, it was confirmed that 96 % of the entire microbial
biota were occupied by a microbe having a 16S rDNA having a homology of 94.8 % with
that of a microbe which belongs to the genus
Paenibacillus (GenBank data base; AJ288158).
[0211] Then, by search in the above-mentioned privately constructed data base for search
for microbe as to the base sequence of the isolated dominant microbe, it was found
that a microbe having completely identical base sequence had been registered therein
with a microbe number 2675. Therefore, search was made in a data base for search for
antimicrobial agent using this microbe number as the search key, whereby it was made
clear that this dominant microbe had once been isolated in the same paper manufacturing
factory and that the vegetative cell for this microbe is susceptible to isothiazolone.
Since the dominant microbe is reagent-susceptible, the cause of the above phenomenon
was assumed to be not based on inadaptability of the selected antimicrobial agent
but based on the manner of application of the antimicrobial agent. Therefore, re-inspection
was made for the antimicrobial agent injection system, whereby it was found that the
delivery rate of the chemical injection pump was reduced to about 1/5 of the nominal
rate, resulting in insufficient application concentration. The reduction of the rate
of injection was supported also from the amount of the preservative solution remained
in the preservative storage. Thus, based on this judgement, cleaning of the starch
paste storage was performed and the chemical injection pump was replaced by a new
one, whereupon the operation was started again. The above phenomenon was removed and
proper microbe cell count was regained.
EXAMPLE 6
〈〈Example of Selection of Slime Control Agent for Filamentous Fungi at Paper Manufacturing
Factory S〉〉
[0212] On the course of slime control which had been continued over a long term using an
antimicrobial agent containing as main reagents DBNPA and BBAB (1,4-bis-(bromoacetoxy)-2-butene)
in a long screen machine operating for papermaking of news printing acidic paper,
slimes mainly of fungi occurred over the entire machine. Therefore, selective separation
of filamentous fungi and yeast was performed using PYD meduim. The colonies formed
after culture for 4 days were all constituted of filamentous fungi in grains of a
diameter of 5 mm with slightly orange-colored hyphae. Eight strains were isolated
in the same manner as in Example 1 and were subjected to analysis of microbial biota
by 18S rDNA. For the PCR primer and for the sequencing primer, there were employed
5'-GTAGTCATATGCTTGTCTC-3' and 5'- GGCTGCTGGCACCAGACTTGC-3', respectively. It was recognized
thereby that all the 8 strains are constituted of a filamentous fungus having an 18S
rDNA which has a homology of 99.2 % with
Chaetomium elatum (GenBank data base; accession number M83257).
[0213] By search in a data base for search for antimicrobial agent using
Chaetomium elatum as the search key, it was confirmed that this filamentous fungus belongs to a group
of filamentous fungi non-susceptible to DBNPA and BBAB. Judgement based on the value

under the environmental condition of the machine indicated that an antimicrobial
agent exhibiting effectiveness on this filamentous fungus is an antimicrobial agent
containing, as the main component, 4,5-dichloro-1,2-dithiolan-3-one (in the following,
called the dithiol). Therefore, the slime control treatment was performed from the
subsequent operation on using an antimicrobial agent based on BBAB and the dithiol
that were selected. Thereafter, during the continued operation for 14 days, no visually
discriminable occurrence of slime was detected.
EXAMPLE 7
〈〈Example of Selection of Slime Control Agent in Cooling Water System for Air Conditioner〉〉
[0214] In a cooling water system for air conditioner in the administration block of Kabushiki
Kaisha N in which slime control treatment was kept by immersing a solid tabletted
antimicrobial agent, prepared by compacting under encapsulating isothiazolone into
tablet, in the cooling water, a significant outbreak of microbial slime occurred.
Since the system uses cooling water with scarce content of organic substance, it was
presumed that the microbial biota therein should be composed largely of non-culturable
microbes. Therefore, it was decided to take steps of extracting entire DNA from the
slime and performing PCR using the so-extracted entire DNA as the template.
[0215] Using a 2 ml capacity microcentrifugal tube equipped with a screw cap, a spaturaful
slime was suspended in 1 milliliter of a DNA extracting buffer solution (100 mM Tris-HCl,
100 mM EDTA, 100 mM Na
2HPO
4 + NaH
2PO
4 and 1.5 M NaCl: pH 8.0) and the suspension was homogenized after admixing thereto
2 grams of 0.1 mm zirconia/silica beads using a beatbeater at its maximum output power
for two minutes. The suspension was further processed by three repeated freezing/thawing
cycles, whereupon the mixture was subjected to reaction by adding thereto 0.01 ml
of Proteinase K (of Seikagaku Kogyo Co., Ltd.) of a concentration of 10 mg/ml for
a reaction time of 15 minutes at 37°C. Thereto was further added 0.2 ml of 10 % SDS
with agitation, whereupon the reaction mixture was stood still for 30 minutes at 65
°C.
[0216] After homogenization again using the beatbeater, the resulting mixture was subjected
to centrifugation (10,000 G, 10 minutes), whereupon the supernatant was collected.
An equal volume of chloroform was added thereto and the mixture was shaken suffuciently,
before it was centrifugalized (10,000 G, 10 minutes), whereupon the supernatant was
recovered. Thereto was added a 0.6 time volume of isopropanol with agitation, whereupon
it was stood still at room temperature for 30 mintes, followed by centrifugation (10,000
G, 10 minutes) to recover the DNA. The collected DNA was rinsed with 70 % ethanol
and was dried, before being suspended in TE buffer solution. The PCR was carried out
in the same manner as in Example 1. As the primer, there were used 5'-GAGTTTGATCMTGGCTCAG-3'
and 5'-CAGCMGCCGCGGTAATWC-3'. For the latter, that modified by phosphatization at
the 5'-terminal was employed and about 500 base sequences were amplified. The resulting
PCR product was treated by λ -exonuclease into single stranded DNA to realize analysis
by SSCP method. Thus, an electrophoresis was performed using a 10 % polyacrylamide
gel at 200 volt under a low temperature condition of 20 °C for a period of time of
8 hours. After the gel was dyed with GelStar (trademark, of Takara Shuzo Co., Ltd.),
DNA bands were confirmed by irradiation by ultraviolet lamp thereonto. About 10 independent
bands were recognized, though bands for considerably high concentrations (that is,
greater contents) were not detected.
[0217] For a slime in this cooling water system which had been collected unintentionally
and held stored under frozen state, similar analysis was performed. By comparison
of the result of this analysis with the result of the afore-mentioned analysis, it
was recognized that no significant discrepancy in the number of bands and in the position
and intensity of corresponding band was found between them, indicating that no variation
in the microbial biota happened before and after the occurrence of the slime trouble.
From the band of the highest concentration among the detected bands, DNA was collected
and the base sequence thereof was determined. It was recognized that the DNA in the
band is composed of a 16S rDNA which has a homology of 95.8 % with that of a microbe
closely related to genus
Rubrivivax (data base of GenBank; accession number X89910) and 16S rDNA which has a homology
of 99.5 % with that of
Sphingomonas sp. (data base of GenBank; accession number AB023290).
[0218] By search in the same privately constructed data base for search for microbe as in
Example 1, it was found that these 16S rDNA had often been isolated in the past from
this cooling water system without any record of significant slime occurrence by treating
with isothiazolone. By research also in the same data base for search for antimicrobial
agent as in Example 1, it was noted that
Sphingomonas sp. is a microbe susceptible to the antimicrobial agent. From all these, it was assumed
that it would be probable that the trouble was not due to inadaptability of the antimicrobial
agent now on use but due to a problematic manner of application thereof. Therefore,
inspection was made into the daily operation report, which showed that an alteration
of operation scheme was entered by the operation personnel by increasing the water
blow out level, whereby the residence time of the cooling water in the cooling water
system is reduced, resulting in a lowering of the concentration of isothiazolone in
the water to a level permitting growth of slime. By regaining the rate of water blow
out to the rated revel, occurrence of slime was ceased.
EXAMPLE 8
〈〈 Example of Antimicrobial Treatment on the Side of RO Concentrate in Ultrahigh Purity
Water Production 〉〉
[0219] On the side of RO concentrate in a ultrahigh purity water production line at an electronics
manufacturing factory H, a slime trouble occred, which caused a trend to reduction
of flux. The slime was suspended in a DNA extracting buffer solution and was subjected
to homogenization after addition thereto glass beads. Thereafter, the procedures of
Example 7 were pursued to effect extraction of DNA, whereupon the 16S rDNA fragments
for all the extracted DNA strands were prepared. After treated into single strand,
analysis was performed by SSCP method. Five independent bands were recognized, of
which one was found as occupying 80 % of the integral intensity. By determining the
base sequence for this band, it was found that the microbe has a homology of 99.9
% with
Ralstonia eutropha (GenBank; accession number D88000).
[0220] A plurality of
Ralstonia eutropha are registered in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent used in Example
1, which have, by comparison with the 16S rDNA isolated above, each a homology of
99.2 - 99.7 % with it. By search, sodium hypochlorite was recognized as the most effective
antimicrobial agent for all of them. However, use thereof is prohibited, since it
has been known that chlorine acts on the RO membrane damagingly. Therefore, further
search was made for an antimicrobial agent which is not damaging to the RO membrane
but is effective for the above-mentioned microbes in the data base for search for
antimicrobial agent, whereby it was found that an antimicrobial agent based on isothiazolone
had recorded an effective experience in a practical application when it was used at
a dosage of 1.2 - 1.5 mg/ℓ as converted to isothiazolone. Accordingly, the so retrieved
antimicrobial agent based on isothiazolone was introduced into the RO concentrate
side space at a dose rate of 1.5 mg/ℓ, after cleaning there. No slime formation was
recognized any more.
REFERENCE EXAMPLE 1
[0221] In a process course of papermaking for neutral paper, slime formation occurred in
the white water circulation system of paper machine after a continuous operation for
about two weeks. A slime control treatment was applied thereto by a method of introducing
a slime control agent containing DBNPA (dibromonitrilopropionamide) as the effective
component into the stuff box intermittently (by an automatic introduction of a treating
liquid dose, settled so as to maintain the DBNPA concentration in the system at 20
mg/ℓ for 20 minutes, by a metering pump four times a day). In this paper manufacturing
factory, a further slime formation trouble occurred also in the clear white water
line, wherefor another slime control treatment was performed by introducing a slime
control agent containing also DBNPA as the effective component into the clear white
water pit intermittently.
EXAMPLE 9
[0222] After two months from the start of the treatment given in the Reference Example 1,
occurrence of slime constituted mainly of bacteria was recognized in the suction box
beneath the wire section of the paper machine. From a sample of this slime, microbes
were cultured by isolation culture on agar plate. For the scooped 48 strains, analysis
of the microbial biota was performed using 16S rDNA as the analysis parameter. Each
16S rDNA was synthesized by PCR using the DNA extracted from each of the strains as
the template, whereupon it was subjected to digestion using three restriction enzymes
(
BstUI,
Rsa1 and
HhaI) to effect RFLP analysis. A preliminary grouping was made judging that microbes
showing electrophoresis pattern in accord with each other belong to identical microbe,
whereupon each microbe was identified by search in the data base of GenBank by access
thereinto using the base sequence at the portion around the site of 500 bp from the
5'-terminal as a search parameter. It was confirmed thereby that, among the 48 strains,
25 strains are
Deincoccus geothermalis, 10 strains are
Acidovorax temperans, 8 strains are a Gram-negative bacterium near-related to the genus
Riemerella, 4 strains are
Sphingomonas and the last one strain is
Rhizobium sp.
[0223] By search in the data base for search for antimicrobial agent using the base sequence
of 16S rDNA for each microbe as a search parameter, it was recognized that
Acidovorax temperans, the Gram-negative bacterium near-related to
Riemerella, Shingomonas and
Rhizobium sp. are susceptible to DBNPA, whereas
Deinococcus geothermalis is resistant to DBNPA.
[0224] In order to confirm this, a sterilizing experiment was carried out for a representative
isolated strain afterwards, which showed that 99 % of living microbe cells had become
extinct for
Acidovorax temperans, a Gram-negative bacterium near-related to
Riemerella, Sphingomonas and
Rhizobium sp. after contact with DBNPA at a concentration of 2 mg/ℓ or even lower for a contact
time of 30 minutes, whereas
Deinococcus geothermalis did completely not sterilized by DBNPA even by contact therewith at 30 mg/ℓ for 30
minutes.
[0225] Samples were collected at various locations in the paper manufacturing process courses
and, for each of them, total microbe cell count was measured by microscope direct
count method after staining with DAPI, whereupon 48 strains were isolated by agar
plate culture to determine the proportion of existence of
Deinococcus geothermalis among the 48 strains based on the base sequence of 16S rDNA. The results of the experiment
are recited in Table 1.
Table 1
| Sample or sampling location |
Total cell count (cells/ml) |
Number of strains of Deinoc. geotherm. (Numb. of colonies among 48 strains) |
Proportion (%) *1 |
| White water in white water silo |
5.1 × 107 |
9 |
19 |
| Clear white water in clear white water pit |
3.0 × 107 |
8 |
17 |
| Industrial water |
5.7 × 103 |
0 |
0 |
| LBKP chest |
6.0 × 106 |
1 |
2 |
| CGP chest |
4.8 × 104 |
0 |
0 |
| Dry broke chest |
8.3 × 107 |
7 |
15 |
| Wet broke chest |
6.7 × 107 |
44 |
92 |
| Mixing chest |
4.8 × 107 |
6 |
13 |
| Machine chest |
5.2 × 107 |
7 |
15 |
| Dyestuff tank |
1.1 × 103 |
0 |
0 |
| Sizing agent tank |
8.7 × 102 |
0 |
0 |
| Ext. starch paste tank |
1.5 × 104 |
0 |
0 |
| Int. starch paste tank |
4.6 × 108 |
0 |
0 |
| Note: *1: [(number of colonies of Deinococcus geothermalis) /48] × 100 |
[0226] Deinococcus geothermalis was present mainly in the wet broke chest at an existence proportion which reached
91.7 %. While this microbe was found also in the LBKP chest and dry broke chest, they
were brought from the recovered white water used for preparation of pulp. It is seen
that
Deinococcus geothermalis did not grow in the mixing chest and in machine chest, where pulp raw materials gather,
since the occupation proportion of
Deinococcus geothermalis therein was low notwithstanding the total cell count increased there. From the results
of the experiment given above; it was concluded that
Deinococcus geothermalis, which is resistant to DBNPA, proliferated in the wet broke chest and was brought
therefrom to the white water circulation system.
[0227] By making search in a data base for search for antimicrobial agent using
Deinococcus geothermalis as the search key and confining the extent of retrieval into slime control agents
having high antimicrobial activity in neutral range, HPGHC [2-(p-hydroxyphenyl)-glyoxylohydroximoyl
chloride] was picked up. It was also recognized that
Deinococcus geothermalis is sterilized by contacting with HPGHC at a system internal concentration of 20 mg/ℓ
for 20 minutes. Since the flow amount through the wet broke system is about 1/20 of
that flown into the white water circulation system, amount of consumption of the chemical
can be economized by introducing it into the wet broke system, in order to attain
the system internal concentration of 20 mg/e . Moreover, it may bring about an advantage
of permitting to spare the amount of chemical to be used as compared with that calculated
from the flow amount ratio, since the state of contact of microbes with the chemical
can be kept over a prolonged time interval without having recourse to continuous addition
of the chemical due to the larger capacity of the wet broke chest permitting longer
residence time of the chemical therein to maintain the microbes held under contact
with the chemical for longer time.
[0228] The data base for search for antimicrobial agent used in this Example had been constructed
by making use of Microsoft Access (trademark) of Microsoft Corp., wherein preservative
experiments and growth inhibiting experiments were performed using various slime control
agents or the original components thereof under experiment conditions at three pH
levels and three temperature levels for microbes isolated from various water systems
and from starch slurry, starch paste and coating color liquor in paper manufacturing
factories, whereupon the results of these experiments were inputted therein together
with the integral data that were obtained in the past from practical treatment works
with slime control agents applied to various objective systems. The search in this
data base was made by utilizing only the functions "sort", "autofilter" and "search"
built in originally in Microsoft Access and the search result was displayed on an
image screen of a computer to decide the judgement.
[0229] Based on the results of the search for slime conrol agent, the treatment scheme was
revised to the operation in which a slime control agent containing HPGHC as the effective
component is added as the origin treating agent to the wet broke chest three times
a day each at a dose rate of 25 milligrams per liter of the retained liquor (chest
capacity), while supplying the white water circulation system with a slime control
agent containing DBNPA as the effective component in the conventional manner.
[0230] The amount of HPGHC used here corresponds to about 1/30 of that in which the chemical
is assumed to be added to the white water circulation system.
[0231] As a result, the amount of deposition of slime was reduced considerably as compared
with that observed upon shut down of machine operation and the cling substance slightly
found in the suction box was changed in the constituent from microbial slime to suspended
matter mainly of pulp fibers.
[0232] At the occasion of the second shut down after the revision of the treatment scheme
and at an occasion directly before it, samples were collected at various locations
in the paper manufacturing process courses, for which total microbe cell count and
the proportion of existence of
Deinococcus geothermalis were determined in the same way as the former practice. It was found thereby that
the total microbe counts were unchanged and within the range of ordinary fluctuation,
but
Deinococcus geothermalis became undetectable. The results are recited in Table 2.
Table 2
| Sample or sampling location |
Total cell count (cells/ml) |
Number of strains of Deinococcus geothermalis (number of colonies among 48 strains) |
| White water in white water silo |
4.8× 107 |
0 |
| Clear white water in clear white water pit |
3.1× 107 |
0 |
| Dry broke chest |
6.0× 107 |
0 |
| Wet broke chest |
5.3× 107 |
0 |
[0233] Based on the results as above, it is seen that
Deinococcus geothermalis, which is resistant to DBNPA, was exterminated at the site of origin of occurrence
thereon, namely, the wet broke chest, by only an additional application of small amount
of an additional slime control agent. It is also seen that the effect of slime control
in the white water circulation system had been assured.
[0234] By the way, the total microbe cell count in the sample of cling substance collected
at the same time from the suction box was determined to be 3.5 × 10
9 cells per one gram of dry substance, wherein there was no
Deinococcus geothermalis detected therefrom.
EXAMPLE 10
[0235] In a paper machine Z (a daily throughput of 290 tons, high grade paper, pH 7.3) of
a paper manufacturing factory A, occurrence of brown defects having sized of 1 - 1.5
mm was recognized frequently since directly after the start of operation. The defect
portions were cut out from the paper and about 30 cut out pieces (about 7.5 mg) were
placed in a 2 ml microcentrifugal tube made of plastic material. To this tube, 1 ml
of a DNA-extracting buffer solution (100 mM Tris-Cl, 100 mM EDTA-Na, 100 mM Na
2HPO
4 and 1.5 M NaCl (pH 8.0)) was added, followed by standing still at room temperature
for 30 minutes to cause the paper sheets to be impregnated sufficiently with the solution.
[0236] After addition of 2 g of 0.1 mm zirconia/ silica beads (BioSpec Products, Inc.) thereto,
the mixture was homogenized using a cell crusher (Beatbeater, of BioSpec Products,
Inc.) for 2 minutes. Then, 10 µl of an aqueous solution of PROTEINASE K (of Seikagaku
Kogyo Co., Ltd.) of a concentration of 10 mg/ml were added thereto and the reaction
was effected at 37 °C for 15 minutes. Thereto were added then 250 µl of 10 % SDS aqueous
solution and the mixture was subjected to homogenization using Beatbeater for 1 minute,
followed by standing still at 60 °C for 30 minutes. After centrifugation at 12,000
rpm at 25 °C for 10 minutes, 600 µl of the supernatant were transferred to a new plastic
tube and thereto were added 600 µl of chloroform. After a sufficient agitation, the
mixture was subjected to centrifugation at 12,000 rpm at 25 °C for 10 minutes. Then,
550 µl of the supernatant were transferred to a new tube, 330 µl of isopropanol were
added thereto and the mixture was agitated mildly, before being stood still at room
temperature for 30 minutes. After centrifugation (12,000 rpm, 25 °C, 10 minutes),
the supernatant was discarded and the tube inside was rinsed with 70 % ethanol, whereupon
the precipitate was dried under a reduced pressure. The dried precipitate was then
suspended in 50 µl of an aqueous TE solution (10 mM Tris-Cl, 1 mM EDTA (pH 8.0)) to
prepare a DNA suspension. For the normal portion of the paper also, a part of the
paper corresponding to 7.5 mg was cut equally into 30 pieces, for which the above
procedures were pursued to effect extraction of DNA. For the sake of confirmation
of the reproducibility, the procedures for the extraction were performed in double
series for each sample.
[0237] Then, using each of the suspensions of DNA that were extracted from the defect portion
and from the normal portion by the above procedures as the template, amplification
of s s rDNA was carried out by PCR using bacteriospecific primers (Bact27f: 5'-AGAGTTTGATCMTGG-CTCAG-3',
Bact519R: 5'-GWATTACCGCGGCKGCTG-3') and fungalspecific primers (NS1: 5'-GTAGTCATATGCTTGTCTC-3',
NS2: 5'-GGCTGCTGGCACCAGACTTGC-3'). As the reagent, PyroBest DNA polymerase (of Takara
Shuzo Co., Ltd.) was used and, as the reactor, GeneAmp 2400 (of Applied Biosystems
Japan, Ltd.) was employed. PCR was carried out in a reaction liquid of 30 µl in 30
repetition cycles each under a condition of 94 °C for 0.2 minute, 55 °C for 0.3 minute
and 72 °C for 1 minute, with final cycle of 72 °C for 7 minutes.
[0238] 2 µl of the amplification product were subjected to an electrophoresis on 2 % agarose
gel at 100 mV for 45 minutes, whereupon staining of DNA was effected by ethidium bromide
staining, in order to observe under UV ray irradiation. The observation showed that
bands for the s s rDNA were seen both for the defect portion and normal portion when
the bacteriospecific primer was used, whereas, when the fungalspecific primer was
used, band for 18S rDNA was recognized only for the defecct portion but not for the
normal portion. From this, it was recognized that the microbe amount in the defect
portion was in the same level as that in the normal portion and that the defect portion
contained a marked proportion of fungi.
[0239] 25 µl of aqueous solution of the amplified 18S rDNA were passed to MicroSpin S-300
HR column (of Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Corp.), followed by removal of unreacted
primer, whereupon a part of the reaction product was subjected to sequencing reaction
using BigDye Cycle Sequencing FS Ready Reaction Kit (of Applied Biosystems Japan,
Ltd.). For the sequencing primer, the above-mentioned NS 1 and NS 2 were used and,
for sequencer, ABI Prism 310 Genetic Analyzer (of Applied Biosystems Japan, Ltd.)
was employed. There was obtained the base sequence designated by Sequence No. 6 in
the Sequence Table.
[0240] Search was carried out for the base sequence of Sequnce No. 6 in a data base. Thus,
by access to the data base of GenBank to compare with the 18S rDNA sequences stored
in the data base using BLAST, it was recognized that base sequence of Sequence No.
6 coincides at the most with the 18S rDNA sequence of filamentous fumgi of genus
Sarcinomyces and has a homology of 94 % therewith.
[0241] The site of origin of occurrence of the filamentous fungus belonging to genus
Sarcinomyces identified in the manner as above was determined by the procedures as given below.
Thus, colony count of this filamentus fungus was determined for the white water and
for the lines for the raw materials based on the number of colonies formed on PDA
plate medium as the parameter of the count. Further, identification of each fungus
was carried out by the DNA sequencing as above using the base sequence of 18S rDNA
of the colony as the identification parameter, after the colonies had been subdivided
into groupes according to the form of colony as the discrimination parameter. It was
found thereby that the base sequence of the DNA of the red brown mold recognized as
the dominant microbe, as seen in Table 3, in the white water and in the LBKP slurry
coincides completely with the base sequence of DNA of fungus isolated from the defect
portion.
[0242] From the above, it was made clear that the defect was caused by the red brown mold
and that many of such molds were brought from the LBKP slurry.
Table 3
| Count of Fungi. (CFU/ml) |
| |
White water |
Stuff box slurry |
LBKP slurry |
NBKP slurry |
Broke slurry |
| Total microbe count |
2.1 × 101 |
4.1 × 101 |
1.0 × 102 |
not detected |
4.0 × 10° |
| Red brown, 2-3 mm felt-like hypha |
1.9 × 101 |
3.6 × 101 |
1.0 × 102 |
not detected |
2.0 × 10° |
| White, 10 - 15 mm, woolly |
1.0 × 10° |
2.0 × 10° |
not detected |
not detected |
not deteted |
| White, green center, 15 - 20 mm, woolly |
not detected |
1.0 × 10° |
not detected |
not detected |
1.0 × 10° |
| Others |
1.0 × 10° |
2.0 × 10° |
not detected |
not detected |
1.0 × 10° |
[0243] Based on the above results, countermeasure for preventing occurrence of defect was
incorporated in the following manner. Inspection was made first in the LBKP production
process course, whereby it was made clear that occurrence of slime of red brown color
was recognized in the filtrate line from the thickener. The fungus colony count of
this slime was detected to be 5 × 10
6 CFU per one gram (wet weight) of the slime. All the detected individuals of the fungus
were the same as that of the red brown colored mold of the dominant microbe of the
white water and also the coincidence in the base sequence therebetween was confirmed.
Also from visual observation under microscope, it was recognized that the slime was
composed mainly of mold. Therefore, a sterilization/preservation treatment was performed
for the filtrate line, after washing this line using NaOH, wherein the treatment was
carried out by introducing intermittently into the line a slime control agent containing
4,5-dichloro-1,2-dithiolan-3-one as the main component, which had been proven that
it was at the most effective for the fungi isolated from the slime in the filtrate
line. This resulted in complete exclusion of occurrence of defect.
EXAMPLE 11
[0244] In a paper machine Y (a daily throughput of 410 tons, slightly coated paper, pH 7.5)
of a paper manufacturing factory B, occurrence of light brown-colored defects having
sizes of about 5 mm diameter was recognized frequently since 11th day from the start
of operation, caused to result in cessation of operation. The defect portions were
cut out from the paper and three cut out pieces (about 8.1 mg) were cut into 2 mm
squares, which were placed in a 2 ml microcentrifugal tube made of plastic material.
To this tube, 1 ml of a DNA-extracting buffer solution (100 mM Tris-Cl, 100 mM EDTA-Na,
100 mM Na
2HPO
4 and 1.5 M NaCl (pH 8.0)) was added, followed by standing still at room temperature
for 30 minutes to cause the paper pieces to be impregnated sufficiently with the solution.
[0245] After addition of 2 g of 0.1 mm zirconia/silica beads thereto, the mixture was homogenized
using Beatbeater for 2 minutes. Then, 10 µl of an aqueous solution of PROTEINASE K
of a concentration of 10 mg/ml were added thereto and the reaction was effected at
37 °C for 15 minutes. Thereto were added then 250µl of 10 % SDS aqueous solution and
the mixture was subjected to homogenization using Beatbeater for 1 minute, followed
by standing still at 60 °C for 30 minutes. After centrifugation at 12,000 rpm at 25
°C for 10 minutes, 600 µl of the supernatant were transferred to a new plastic tube
and thereto were added 600 µl of chloroform. After a sufficient agitation, the mixture
was subjected to a centrifugation at 12,000 rpm at 25 °C for 10 minutes. Then, 550
µl of the supernatant were transferred to a new tube, 330 µl of isopropanol were added
thereto and the mixture was agitated mildly, before being stood still at room temperature
for 30 minutes. After centrifugation (12,000 rpm, 25 °C, 10 minutes), the supernatant
was discarded and the tube inside was rinsed with 70 % ethanol, whereupon the precipitate
was dried under a reduced pressure. The dried precipitate was then suspended in 50
µl of an aqueous TE solution (10 mM Tris-Cl, 1 mM EDTA (pH 8.0)) to prepare a DNA
suspension. For the normal portion of the paper also, a part of the paper corresponding
to 8.1 mg of such normal paper were cut equally into 25 pieces, for which, the above
procedures were pursued to effect extraction of DNA. For the sake of confirmation
of the reproducibility, the procedures for the extraction were performed in double
series for each sample.
[0246] Then, using each of the suspensions of DNA that were extracted from the defect portion
and from the normal portion by the above procedures as the template, amplification
of s s rDNA was carried out by PCR using, as in Example 10, bacteriospecific primers
(Bact27f, Bact519R) and fungalspecific primers (NS1, NS2). As the reagent, PyroBest
DNA polymerase was used and, as the reactor, GeneAmp 2400 was employed. PCR was carried
out in 30 repetition cycles each under a condition of 94 °C for 0.2 minute, 55 °C
for 0.3 minute and 72 °C for 1 minute, with final cycle of 72 °C for 7 minutes.
[0247] 2 µl of the amplification product were subjected to an electrophoresis on 2 % agarose
gel at 100 mV for 45 minutes, whereupon staining of DNA was effected by ethidium bromide
staining, in order to observe under UV ray irradiation. The observation showed that
clear bands for the s s rDNA were recognized for the defect portion while only considerably
weak bands were seen for the normal portion when the bacteriospecific primer was used,
whereas, when the fungalspecific primer was used, no band was recognized both for
the defecct portion and for the normal portion.
[0248] From this, it was seen that the defect portion contained a remarkable amount of microbes
as compared with the normal portion.
[0249] During the period in which occurrence of defect appeared frequently, the system inside
was so polluted wholly that detection of the origin of pollution causing the defect
was impossible by visual inspection. Therefore, samples were collected from the inside
of the system and comparison of the microbial biota in the slime with that in the
defect portion was performed. The samples were collected from:
1) slime in the head box,
2) slime beneath the wheel,
3) slime on the wall of wahite water silo,
4) slime on the wall of stuff box,
5) slime in tubes of CP (consistency profiling control system) and
6) white water.
[0250] DNA extraction was performed in the procedures as given above for the precipitate
obtained by the centrifugation, for the slimes, from each an about 50 mg of wet slime
and, for the white water, from 2 ml of white water, by subjecting to centrifugation
at 10,000 rpm at 4 °C for 10 minutes. The dried centrifugation precipitate was suspended
in 50 µl of aqueous TE solution.
[0251] For the comparison of the microbial biota, TRFLP method was employed. PCR was carried
out under the same condition as given above using, as the template, the DNA suspensions
from the slime and from the white water as well as the DNA suspension from the defect.
For the primer, one which is labelled at the 5'-terminal of Bact27f with 4,4,2',4',5',7'-hexachloro-6-carboxylfluorescein
(6-HEX) was used. 25 µl of aqueous solution of amplified 16S rDNA were passed to MicroSpin
S-400 HR column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech Corp.) to remove the unreacted primer,
whereupon 0.5 µl thereof were mixed with 2 µl of NE2 buffer solution containing 2
units of the restriction enzyme
BstUI (of New England Biolabo Corp.) to effect the reaction at 65 °C for 2 hours. To
the reaction mixture, there were added 12 µl of formamide and 0.5 µl of Gene-Scan
500 Rox Size Standard (Applied Biosystems Japan, Ltd.) succeedingly and the mixture
was agitated sufficiently. The reaction of the mixture was effected at 94 °C for two
minutes, whereupon the reaction mixture was cooled promptly in ice water and, then,
it was subjected to fragment analysis using ABI PRISM 310 Genetic Analyzer in accordance
with the GeneScan Program (Applied Biosystems Japan, Ltd.). The results of analysis
are shown in Fig. 5.
[0252] One bacterium exhibits an intrinsic peak pattern except by, for example, the polymorphism
due to content of a plurality of copies, the overlapping of the base sequence for
discriminating the restriction enzyme and so on. If the fragment patterns as to the
parameter constituted of the peak position and the amplitude are similar between two
samples to be compared, it is judged that the microbial biota is nearly similar between
the two. As seen from Fig. 5, the fragment pattern for the sample from the defect
is mainly based on TRF (terminal restriction fragment) of 201 bases, which resembles
the pattern for the sample from CP tube slime but is different clearly from the patterns
for those of the white water mainly of the TRF of 223 bases and of others.
[0253] From the above analysis results, it was assumed that the defect was caused by introduction
of the slime formed in CP tube into the papermaking process course upon detachment
or the like. In the CP line, clear white water obtained by treating white water through
a polydiscfilter was used, which had hitherto not been subjected to a slime control
treatment. Therefore, treatment was now applied by intermittent introduction of a
slime control agent containing as the main component 2,2-dibromo-3-nitrilopropionamide
into the clear white water pit twice a day. Occurrence of slime formation in the CP
tube became thenceforth decreased remarkably and occurrence of defect was also removed.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0254] The method for selecting antimicrobial agent according to the present invention can
be utilized, for example, in antimicrobial teratments, in monitoring antimicrobial
effect, in slime control in paper manufacturing process and in the selection of antimicrobial
agent (slime control agent) for microbe inhibition in, for example, paper manufacturing
process, since it permits to select an optimum antimicrobial agent simply within a
brief time.
[0255] The process for effecting antimicrobial treatment according to the present invention
can afford to effect an efficient antimicrobial treatment by permitting selection
of an optimum industrial antimicrobial agent in accordance with each specific microbial
biota of the objective system within a brief time.
[0256] The method for monitoring antimicrobial treatment effect according to the present
invention can afford to grasp within a brief time in a simple and assured manner whether
the effect of the antimicrobial agent is revealed or not, whereby troubles caused
by growth of microbes can be prevented beforehand.
[0257] The method for inhibiting slime formation according to the present invention can
afford to effect inhibition of slime formation efficiently with least requisite amount
of slime control agent, due to permission of assured selection of a slime control
agent adapted at the most to each resistant microbe within a brief time.
[0258] The method for analysing cling substance on the product of paper manufacturing process
according to the present invention can afford to identify the site of origin of occurrence
of the causal microbe that caused the defect on the paper product in a simple and
assured manner.
[0259] The method for inspecting the causal basis of occurrence of cling substance on products
in paper manufacturing process can afford to detect the location of occurrence of
the causal microbe that caused the defect on the paper prodect in a simple and assured
manner